"One way to reduce stigma was to remove the word "disorder." We changed the name from gender-identity disorder to gender dysphoria
"We also tried to narrow the diagnostic criteria, with the idea that you do not want to give people a diagnosis when they do not want one,
"A person who has had treatment, who is not dysphoric but used to be dysphoric, can still have a diagnosis code. This was how we solved that problem in the DSM.
"In addition, we removed the specifier for sexual orientation.
"There was more flexibility in the ICD compared with the DSM, where a diagnosis is either in or out. The ICD includes all diagnoses, psychiatric and medical. The recommendation, which has been followed, is that the new diagnosis, called gender incongruence, will be moved from the mental disorder section to another chapter, called "Conditions Related to Sexual Health." This allows countries that have national healthcare systems to have a diagnosis code, to continue to provide care for people, and to reduce the stigma of a mental disorder.
"The change offers a new diagnosis: gender incongruence.
"Thanks for listening to me. This is Dr Jack Drescher.
Comments:
"Psychiatrists meeting together to decide how to change a diagnosis for the sake of "reducing the stigma" is laughable....
"...neither unhappiness nor delusional thinking should be treated with hormones or radically destructive genital surgery, especially in the very young. Trying to shove this nonsense into DSM 5 or ICD is pure political posturing...
"Since when does it matter whether the patient wants a diagnosis or not?
"For some time now, insurance companies have been basing payments on diagnosis. Now the diagnostic classifiers are basing diagnosis on insurance reimbursement. It used to be that a diagnosis was a form of shorthand communication between clinicians...