There is a debate in psychiatry regarding whether it is better to use neo-Kraepelinian diagnostic categories or unitary models of psychosis in clinical practice. This article argues that clinicians should use either model as appropriate for the case in question, along with the conceptual framework used in the clinical management of psychosis without a clear biological cause. It first explores the values involved in the development of psychiatric classification systems, the purpose of classification and how we reached the current DSM/ICD and unitary models of psychosis. It then describes a diagnostic approach in which the choice of model should depend on the case in question, and offers a diagnostic protocol to guide the decision
Psychiatry is a young, still developing science, that must, against sharp opposition, gradually achi...
Psychosis has been recognised as an abnormal state in need of care throughout history and by diverse...
Forgetting history, which frequently repeats itself, is a mistake. In General Psychopathology, Jaspe...
Emil Kraepelin would clearly recognize his 19th century dichotomy within current operational classif...
Throughout its development, psychiatry has struggled to legitimate itself as a scientific and medica...
Kraepelin's methodology and clinical descriptions are still influential in the XXIst century psychia...
The Kraepelinian dichotomy — the broad division of the major mood and psychotic illnesses of adultho...
Recent genetic studies reinforce the view that current approaches to the diagnosis and classificatio...
The classification of schizophrenia is currently under review in a coordinated worldwide consultatio...
Kraepelin's basic attitude to the classification of psychoses was data-oriented and flexible. In his...
The nosology for major psychiatric disorders developed by Emil Kraepelin in the 1890s has substantia...
Introduction: A century ago, Kraepelin stated that the distinctive feature of schizophrenia was prog...
This article traces the history of classification systems for mental illness and then reviews the hi...
The limitations of current diagnostic categories are well recognised but their rationale, advantages...
Methodically sound psychiatric diagnoses are necessary quality-assuring elements in forensic psychia...
Psychiatry is a young, still developing science, that must, against sharp opposition, gradually achi...
Psychosis has been recognised as an abnormal state in need of care throughout history and by diverse...
Forgetting history, which frequently repeats itself, is a mistake. In General Psychopathology, Jaspe...
Emil Kraepelin would clearly recognize his 19th century dichotomy within current operational classif...
Throughout its development, psychiatry has struggled to legitimate itself as a scientific and medica...
Kraepelin's methodology and clinical descriptions are still influential in the XXIst century psychia...
The Kraepelinian dichotomy — the broad division of the major mood and psychotic illnesses of adultho...
Recent genetic studies reinforce the view that current approaches to the diagnosis and classificatio...
The classification of schizophrenia is currently under review in a coordinated worldwide consultatio...
Kraepelin's basic attitude to the classification of psychoses was data-oriented and flexible. In his...
The nosology for major psychiatric disorders developed by Emil Kraepelin in the 1890s has substantia...
Introduction: A century ago, Kraepelin stated that the distinctive feature of schizophrenia was prog...
This article traces the history of classification systems for mental illness and then reviews the hi...
The limitations of current diagnostic categories are well recognised but their rationale, advantages...
Methodically sound psychiatric diagnoses are necessary quality-assuring elements in forensic psychia...
Psychiatry is a young, still developing science, that must, against sharp opposition, gradually achi...
Psychosis has been recognised as an abnormal state in need of care throughout history and by diverse...
Forgetting history, which frequently repeats itself, is a mistake. In General Psychopathology, Jaspe...