Oh my gosh the DSM doesn’t let you diagnose adolescents with personality disorders for GOOD REASONS having to do with basic human emotional development. This is irresponsible and ignorant.https://twitter.com/DetransCanada/status/1337896850150584322 …
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And hey I buy that in the adult gender dysphoric population you see a high incidence of personality disorders. But a clinician, who treats adolescent patients, would not make this diagnosis. Because we don’t give personality diagnoses to teens!
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PD’s include in their criteria that they are highly resistant to treatment and symptoms are present across the life span. You’d have to be a total hack of a clinician to assert these things about a teen.
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You’re cutting yourself and threatening suicide at 28? Ok, yr therapist could reasonably suspect BPD. Although if they actually put it in your paperwork before a year of treatment I’d again, judge them as an overconfident hack.
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And honestly, teen girls have to deal with enough sexism in MH treatment, it should not be anyone’s assumption that a self harming, chronically dysregulated teen girl is going to be treatment resistant. She’s growing up! Not the appropriate time for diagnoses w/ permanency.
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+ tbh as a clinician who works mainly w/ teens, they’re all on the internet romanticizing cutting/suicide/pro-ana/furrydom- we have to look at both their developmental stage and social context, which at this point in history is WEIRD AS SHIT.
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Replying to @CareyCallsBS
I remember my emotional problems age 14-19. At that time I was effectively displaying BPD... but I grew out of it. How can you diagnose children with personality disorders when they haven’t finished developing their personality
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Replying to @CareyCallsBS
So... how can gender Dysphoria be diagnosed in children then?
. I know it was moved out of mental health, but I’m not sure that makes sense.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @DuncanHenry78
GD is a separate (mental health) diagnosis, in the same classification (axis 1) rather than the personality disorders (axis 2). It’s predecessor, gender identity disorder, was also axis 1, which means it was considered likely to be alleviated by treatment. 1/2
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What’s unique about both the old GID and the current GD diagnoses is that they are diagnosed as mental health conditions but the treatment includes surgical/endocrine treatments. The DSM is not a super document, however that’s still v unique about these diagnoses. 2/2
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Replying to @CareyCallsBS @DuncanHenry78
Sorry meant to write “not a super logical document.” But the total extraordinary weirdness of GD as a mental health diagnosis treated through surgery is a very distinct issue then suggesting teens be given axis 2 diagnoses.
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