ICD-10 Revision

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A level Psychology Flashcards on ICD-10 Revision, created by Abigail Mackay on 07/11/2017.
Abigail Mackay
Flashcards by Abigail Mackay, updated more than 1 year ago
Abigail Mackay
Created by Abigail Mackay over 6 years ago
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Question Answer
What is the ICD? The ICD is a diagnostic manual. It is a classification system, covering all diseases and disorders. The ICD groups disorders into “families” of related disorders. This enables the professional to quickly go from a general diagnosis to a specific one, and later, to a very precise sub-type of a disorder.
Why was ICD created? The World Health Organisation (WHO) aimed to improve healthcare across the world, and they produce the ICD free of charge.
What is in the ICD-10? The ICD-10 involves all diseases, but section F “mental and behavioural disorders” is specific to mental health disorders
What is in Section F? The ICD-10 involves all diseases, but section F “mental and behavioural disorders” is specific to mental health disorders. Within section F, disorders are grouped together into 10 different families, e.g. mood disorders. A numerical system is used with each “family” given a number, e.g. F3 relates to mood disorders. The next digit represents an individual specific disorder. E.g. F31 is bipolar disorder and F32 is depression. Further use of digits tells you to sub-type of the disorder, e.g. F32.0 is mild depression. Some disorders have further digits and decimal places for additional sub-categories, e.g. F32.0.01 is mild depression with somatic symptoms.
What is the process of classifying a disorder using the ICD? This process allows for very specific diagnosis, starting with a general classification to a specific individual disorder. Starting with the family of the disorder, then the disorder, then the sub-type etc.
What are the main strengths? 1. Standardised and operationalised criteria allow for a common, consistent, reliable diagnosis across different clinicians. 2. There are very precise sub-types of disorders identified in the classification system, which allow professionals to make valid and accurate diagnoses, consequently resulting in appropriate treatments being delivered to the right patients.
What are the main weaknesses? 1. The ICD medicalises mental health, presenting disorders as “illnesses” that need “cures.” However, some argue that mental health disorders such as schizophrenia simply present a different way of living (Laing). 2. Providing someone with a label of having a mental health disorder may lead to stigmatisation and decreased self-esteem. 3. The ICD reduces mental health disorders down to a finite set of symptoms, which might not consider the entire complex nature of living with the disorder.
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