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. 2014 Apr;202(4):346-52.
doi: 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000128.

A diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders history of premenstrual dysphoric disorder

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A diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders history of premenstrual dysphoric disorder

Peter Zachar et al. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2014 Apr.

Abstract

The proposals to include a menstruation-related mood disorder in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Revised Third Edition (DSM-III-R), and DSM-IV led to intense public and behind-the-scenes controversy. Although the controversies surrounding the DSM-5 revision were greater in number than the controversies of the earlier revisions, the DSM-5 proposal to include a menstruation-related mood disorder was not among them. Premenstrual dysphoric disorder was made an official disorder in the DSM-5 with no significant protest. To understand the factors that led to this change, we interviewed those psychiatrists and psychologists who were most involved in the DSM-IV revision. On the basis of these interviews, we offer a list of empirical and nonempirical considerations that led to the DSM-IV compromise and explore how key alterations in these considerations led to a different outcome for the DSM-5.

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