4/3/2024 0 Comments Ptsd preschool dsm 5 criteriaPTSD looks quite different in young kids, compared to older children and adults, and likely has been missed and underdiagnosed as a result of a misfit between the DSM criteria and the manifestation of the illness in preschool-aged kids (Scheeringa MS et al, Depression and Anxiety 2011 28:770–783). There is a distinct set of diagnostic criteria for PTSD in children under six years in DSM-5. Further, there is no longer a distinction between acute and chronic phases of PTSD.įinally, a new signifier, PTSD with prominent dissociative symptoms, was added because people with dissociative features (about one third of people with PTSD) seem to require more stabilization and support before they can benefit from exposure-based CBT treatment (Friedman MJ et al, Depression and Anxiety 2011:28:737–749). For assessment of re-experiencing in children, there is an emphasis on behavior and observable symptoms, such as repetitive play with themes of the trauma and frightening dreams without recognizable trauma. Hyperarousal and re-experiencing symptom clusters remain distinct groups in the DSM-5. The avoidance symptom cluster has been separated into two clusters: avoidance and negative cognition/mood symptoms. Symptom clusters have been rearranged and expanded from three to four, based on data showing that this four-factor model more accurately describes what we see clinically than does the three-factor model in DSM-IV (Friedman MJ et al, Depression and Anxiety 2011 28:750–769). It also explicitly includes sexual assault as a traumatic event, important for those working with children because of kids’ vulnerability to this type of mistreatment. In addition, Criterion A1, “exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence” (ie, directly experiencing the traumatic event), has been narrowed and refined, and in DSM-5 no longer includes the death of family or a close friend due to natural causes. Instead, DSM-5 focuses more on the behavioral and affective symptoms and subjective reactions, while important to address in treatment, are not part of the diagnostic criteria. This criterion has been problematic for many of us who treat PTSD, especially for young children who may not be able to recall or describe their subjective reaction to a traumatic event. Perhaps more clinically pertinent is the removal of criterion A2, which in DSM-IV specified a subjective reaction of intense fear, helplessness, or horror (in children, this could have been disorganization or agitation). The biggest structural change is the removal of PTSD from the anxiety disorder section and its inclusion in a new section on trauma and stressor-related disorders. Here, we will review the changes to the diagnosis of PTSD in DSM-5, with a focus on those specific to children and adolescents. It wasn’t until the publication of DSM-III-R in 1987 that we recognized in a formal way that some children go on to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, throughout history, most people didn’t believe that children experienced lasting psychic trauma as a result of these events. Unfortunately, children are exposed to traumatic events-isolated ones such as natural disasters or serious accidents, and recurring traumas such as domestic violence and sexual abuse.
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