Thanks, Chris! This really sparked a good discussion in psychopharmacology 
today!
 Back to "latent schizophrenia"?! (etc.) That is indeed disturbing. Nice to see 
we are learning so much from past mistakes. What is next? "They were creepy 
syndrome"?
Tim
_______________________________
Timothy O. Shearon, PhD
Professor and Chair Department of Psychology
The College of Idaho
Caldwell, ID 83605
email: [email protected]

teaching: intro to neuropsychology; psychopharmacology; general; history and 
systems

"You can't teach an old dogma new tricks." Dorothy Parker

________________________________________
From: Christopher D. Green [[email protected]]
Sent: Tuesday, March 02, 2010 10:04 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] DSM V

Two interesting notes here. First, Ed Shorter isn't just a psychiatrist
but one of the most influential historians of psychiatry around. His
historiographic commitments are rather, uh, conventional, but he knows
as much as anyone about nearly everything. Second, this article is a
sample of the "new" Wall Street Journal, which was recently purchased by
Rupert Murdoch who aims to use it to kill the New York Times, which he
despises: http://nymag.com/news/media/64305/

Chris Green
York U.
Toronto
==========


Horton, Joseph J. wrote:
 The Wall Street Journal offered an interesting perspective on DSM V from the 
perspective of a psychiatrist.
http://tinyurl.com/yh5ah47

Two paragraphs from the column:
To flip through the latest draft of the American Psychiatric Association's 
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, in the works for seven years now, is to see 
the discipline's floundering writ large. Psychiatry seems to have lost its way 
in a forest of poorly verified diagnoses and ineffectual medications. Patients 
who seek psychiatric help today for mood disorders stand a good chance of being 
diagnosed with a disease that doesn't exist and treated with a medication 
little more effective than a placebo.

* * *
A new problem is the extension of "schizophrenia" to a larger population, with 
"psychosis risk syndrome." Even if you aren't floridly psychotic with 
hallucinations and delusions, eccentric behavior can nonetheless awaken the 
suspicion that you might someday become psychotic. Let's say you have 
"disorganized speech." This would apply to about half of my students. Pour on 
the Seroquel for "psychosis risk syndrome"!

Joe

Joseph J. Horton, Ph. D.
Box 3077
Grove City College
Grove City, PA 16127
724-458-2004
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

In God we trust, all others must bring data.



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--

Christopher D. Green
Department of Psychology
York University
Toronto, ON M3J 1P3
Canada



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