{"id":46043,"date":"2014-05-06T21:16:58","date_gmt":"2014-05-07T01:16:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/?p=46043"},"modified":"2014-05-06T22:34:38","modified_gmt":"2014-05-07T02:34:38","slug":"1913","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2014\/05\/06\/1913\/","title":{"rendered":"1913&#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<br \/>\n<blockquote>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"big\"><a href=\"http:\/\/ajp.psychiatryonline.org\/article.aspx?articleid=1866169\" target=\"_blank\">DSM-5 and the Research Domain Criteria: 100 Years After Jaspers&rsquo; <em>General Psychopathology<\/em><\/a><\/div>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"small\">by Jose de Leon, M.D.<\/div>\n<div align=\"center\" class=\"middle\"><strong><font color=\"#004400\">American Journal of Psychiatry.<\/font><\/strong> 2014 171:492-494.<\/div>\n<p align=\"justify\">In 1913, 30-year-old German psychiatrist Karl Jaspers published the first edition of <em>General Psychopathology<\/em>,  in which he summarized current psychiatric knowledge and included his  ideas regarding the methodological and scientific issues then facing  psychiatry. In the words of his biographer, Jaspers thought the  discipline of psychiatry &ldquo;was crying out for a systematic clarification  of current thinking&rdquo; and that &ldquo;to make real progress psychiatrists must  learn to think,&rdquo; but his book was not well received by more senior  German psychiatrists. Jaspers subsequently became better known as a philosopher. In 1922, when writing the third edition,  Jaspers was no longer in direct contact with psychiatry and asked for  suggestions from Kurt Schneider, an excellent young psychiatrist, who  then probably updated the later editions of the book.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">The first English translation of <em>General Psychopathology<\/em>, more than 900 pages long, was published in 1963, reflecting the seventh German edition.  Jaspers&rsquo; book defined psychiatry as a hybrid scientific discipline that  must combine the methods of the natural and the social sciences which,  respectively, provide an explanation of psychiatric diseases that  follows the medical model and an understanding of psychiatric  abnormalities that are variations of human living. <em>General Psychopathology<\/em> has had a continuous influence on psychiatry in the United Kingdom, including psychiatric research and resident training, but has had very limited direct impact on U.S. psychiatry. <em>General Psychopathology<\/em>&rsquo;s English translator  described a visit to a Philadelphia psychiatry department, where the  chairman told him, &ldquo;Nobody reads it, but it is obligatory to have it  seen on your shelf.&rdquo; The <em>American Journal of Psychiatry<\/em> has published only two articles on Jaspers. In 1967, Havens commented on the publication of the <em>General Psychopathology<\/em>  translation and hoped that U.S. psychiatrists would be open to Jaspers,  who &ldquo;provides a systematic rationale for eclecticism.&rdquo; In 1986,  Schwartz and Wiggins used Jaspers&rsquo; &ldquo;explaining&rdquo; and &ldquo;understanding&rdquo; concepts in the context of Engel&rsquo;s biopsychosocial model.<\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\">At 100 years, we might speculate on what  Jaspers would think about the current differences in diagnostic strategy  between the National Institute of Mental Health&rsquo;s Research Domain  Criteria [RDoC]  and DSM-5. The RDoC appears reminiscent of Karl Wernicke&rsquo;s attempt to  consider all mental disorders as brain disorders, and DSM-5 follows Emil  Kraepelin&rsquo;s dictum that all psychiatric disorders follow the medical  model of disease. Jaspers had strong critiques of both Wernicke and  Kraepelin.<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<div align=\"justify\">This time last year, I read an article by Dr. Mario Maj in World Psychiatry, <strong><font color=\"#200020\">Mental disorders as &ldquo;brain diseases&rdquo; and Jaspers&rsquo; legacy<\/font><\/strong> [see <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/03\/07\/an-anniversary-2\/\" target=\"_blank\">an anniversary&hellip;<\/a>]. I didn&#8217;t even know that Karl Jaspers was a psychiatrist before then. I knew him as a philosopher. But I found the article immediately compelling, because it said what I&#8217;ve always thought [and still think]. I even drew one of my little diagrams to illustrate Jaspers simplified:<\/div>\n<div align=\"center\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"280\" vspace=\"5\" border=\"0\" src=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/images\/jaspers-1.gif\" \/><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">There were the Brain Diseases [Cerebral Illnesses], the Psychiatric Diseases [Major Psychoses], and the mental illnesses associated with life and experience [Personality Disorders]. When psychiatry changed in 1980 with the DSM-III, I didn&#8217;t [get it or change]. I thought of these three categories with <em>different mindsets<\/em>. So when psychiatry began to conflate the circles, I left the academy. I didn&#8217;t think I was a dinosaur or reactionary, but I was certainly told that. That&#8217;s ancient history, but when I read Maj&#8217;s paper, I was glad to see it said by someone of Jaspers&#8217; stature. Then six months ago, I read Dr. Leon&#8217;s paper <strong><font color=\"#200020\">A post-DSM-III wake-up call to European psychiatry<\/font><\/strong> [see <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/10\/02\/back-at-you-eu\/\">back at you, EU&hellip;<\/a>]. There was Jaspers again with another favorite, Kurt Schneider. So I&#8217;m pleased to see Dr. Leon&#8217;s thoughts in a mainstream American journal:<\/div>\n<blockquote>\n<div align=\"justify\">According to Insel et al.,  &ldquo;the RDoC framework conceptualizes mental illness as brain disorders.  In contrast to neurological disorders with identifiable lesions, mental  disorders can be addressed as disorders of brain circuits.&rdquo; At the  beginning of the 20th century, Wernicke, already famous for describing  the sensory speech center, also wrote a textbook including a  pathophysiological model of the relationship between brain and behavior,  which became one of the most important competitors of Kraepelin&rsquo;s  textbook.  According to Jaspers, Wernicke believed that all mental illnesses are  &ldquo;cerebral illnesses in the sense that they can be wholly comprehended in  terms of cerebral processes&rdquo;. If Wernicke had not died young, we psychiatrists might be living in a &ldquo;Wernickian world&rdquo; instead of a &ldquo;Kraepelinian world&rdquo;.  Although Jaspers acknowledges that Wernicke&rsquo;s pathophysiological model  applied well to aphasia and other neurological disorders, Jaspers  thought Wernicke erred in extending it to all psychiatric disorders.  Jaspers contrasted Wernicke and Sigmund Freud, who were both disciples  of the same Viennese mentor, Theodor Meynert, saying that they were  positioned at opposite extremes in psychiatry.  In Jaspers&rsquo; view, Wernicke thought that &ldquo;explaining&rdquo; was the only  methodology needed in psychiatry. On the other hand, Freud thought that  &ldquo;understanding&rdquo; was the only methodology needed in psychiatry. The  RDoC&rsquo;s focus on brain disorders implies a view similar to Wernicke&rsquo;s  that explaining is the only methodology needed in psychiatry.<\/div>\n<p align=\"justify\">The diagnostic scheme for psychiatric disorders developed by the Department of Psychiatry at Washington University,  which led to DSM-III, DSM-IV, and DSM-5, is a Kraepelinian nosological  model where mental disorders follow the medical model of disease as a  set of identifiable symptoms. Jaspers was critical of Kraepelin&rsquo;s  idealization of the medical model of general paralysis of the insane  [neurosyphilis] as a model for psychiatric disorders, with each disorder  having a unique cause, set of symptoms, course, outcome, and  neuropathology. In <em>General Psychopathology<\/em>, Jaspers proposed  that some psychiatric disorders follow the traditional medical model,  principally those that were called organic mental disorders in DSM-III.  Jaspers called them &ldquo;known somatic illnesses with psychic disturbances&rdquo;  [&ldquo;Group I&rdquo;]. Other psychiatric disorders, he proposed, were not medical  disorders but variations of normality; Jaspers called these disorders of  personality, including &ldquo;abnormal reactions, neurosis and neurotic  syndromes, as well as abnormal personalities and their developments&rdquo;  [&ldquo;Group III&rdquo;]. Situated between them were the psychoses [&ldquo;Group II&rdquo;],  which, according to Jaspers, could be distinguished from normality but  were not clearly separated from each other&mdash;e.g., intermediate cases  between schizophrenia and manic-depressive illnesses. Jaspers felt that  Kraepelin&rsquo;s denial of the heterogeneous nature of mental disorders  failed to capture some psychiatric disorders correctly.<\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\">Jaspers&rsquo; critiques a century ago of  Wernicke&rsquo;s brain pathophysiological model and Kraepelin&rsquo;s medical model  might thus be applied contemporarily to RDoC and DSM-5. We still  struggle 100 years later with the issues that Jaspers raised: <strong><font color=\"#200020\"> psychiatry is a hybrid scientific discipline that must include in its  research enterprise patients&rsquo; beliefs and culture, influences not  captured by traditional scientific reductionism, and&nbsp; psychiatry  encompasses heterogeneous disorders, not just those that follow the  traditional medical model.<\/font><\/strong><\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<div align=\"justify\">I don&#8217;t know much more to say about that last bit except, &quot;Absolutely!&quot; I think I might have found the DSM-III changes in psychiatry more palatable if they&#8217;d shrunk the specialty to the two left-hand circles where they fit. But that&#8217;s not what happened. Instead they expanded the domain of what was once called Biological Psychiatry to encompass all of mental illness.<\/div>\n<p align=\"justify\">When I discovered Jaspers a year ago, I revisited the history of that era. These days, we talk a lot about ideologies, biases, and conflicts of interest, but by the standards of a century ago in Europe, we&#8217;re rookies in dealing with outside forces. I&#8217;d made my peace with Freud in analytic training and teaching the &quot;Freud Course&quot; in our Psychoanalytic Institute &#8211; what he got right, where he was dead wrong, how his persona influenced his work, and the&nbsp; impact of the anti-semitism of those times on so many things in his life. While I can join in eruditely with those who never tire of criticizing many of his theories, his clinical acumen and his contributions to listening and understanding were unequaled in my experience, and I wouldn&#8217;t have missed the chance to study Freud&#8217;s thinking for anything.<\/p>\n<p align=\"justify\">But I knew next to nothing about Kraepelin. As I read about him, his views on mental diseases and his sociopolitical views merged and were a major surprise to me [see <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/04\/30\/all-ears\/\">all ears&hellip;<\/a>, <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/05\/01\/an-open-question\/\">an open question&hellip;<\/a>, see also Dr. Noll&#8217;s comments to those posts]. He was as complicated as Freud and very much a man of his times. His theories were all about a &quot;<em>congenitally inferior predisposition<\/em>,&quot; &quot;<em>hereditary degeneration,&quot; and &quot;genetic influences<\/em>&quot; result from &quot;<em>alcohol and syphilis<\/em>.&quot; Candidly, he was into eugenics and had he lived long enough, I fear he would gotten caught up in the craziness that swept German under Hitler. That&#8217;s a harsh thing to say and I&#8217;m no expert, but it&#8217;s not said lightly. A couple of the softer quotes [from <a href=\"http:\/\/books.google.com\/books?id=3ukW75hVFFgC&#038;lpg=PA221&#038;ots=2OqEbp7Skz&#038;dq=Two%20faces%20of%20Emil%20Kraepelin&#038;pg=PA224#v=onepage\" target=\"_blank\">Shepherd<\/a>, see also <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/04\/30\/all-ears\/\">all ears&hellip;<\/a>, <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/05\/01\/an-open-question\/\">an open question&hellip;<\/a>]:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<div align=\"justify\" class=\"small\"><font color=\"#200020\">On the origins of  hysteria: [Kraepelin] wrote about &lsquo;morbid&rsquo; constitution,  &lsquo;defective heredity&rsquo; and certain environmental conditions. He considered  the possibility of uterine disturbances but said the role played by  &lsquo;the female sexual organs &hellip; is not clear&rsquo;. In the eighth edition of  Psychiatrie [1909&ndash;15], he considered at length [70 pages] the origins of  paranoia: was it an outgrowth of &lsquo;the hard blows life delivers to  everyone&rsquo; or was it owing to innate degeneracy where &lsquo;morbid germs &hellip;  were already present in the disposition&rsquo; as in a genetic disease like  Huntington&rsquo;s chorea? Kraepelin opted for  degeneracy.<\/font><\/div>\n<\/ul>\n<ul>\n<div align=\"justify\" class=\"small\"><font color=\"#200020\">On \u0003individuals with distinctly hysterical traits:  &hellip;\u0003among the leaders of current and past upheavals one also finds a  surprising number of people who in one way or another fall outside the  bounds of normality. In this latter category he concludes \u0003dreamers and poets, swindlers and Jews:  The active participation of the Jewish race in political upheavals has  something to do with this [morbidity]. The frequency of psychopathic  predisposition in Jews could have played a role, although it is their  harping criticism, their rhetorical and theatrical abilities, and their  doggedness and determination which are most important.<\/font><\/div>\n<\/ul>\n<div align=\"justify\">and as to psychological causation:<\/div>\n<div align=\"center\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"520\" height=\"128\" border=\"0\" src=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/images\/kraepelin-2.gif\" \/><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">Karl Jaspers was also affected by the sociocultural forces in Germany during those years. He left practice after his 1913 book, <em>General Psychopathology<\/em>, and taught psychology. At age 38, he moved to philosophy where he is now better known. In 1937, he was removed from his academic position and his books were banned because of his &quot;Jewish taint&quot; [his wife was Jewish]. While Jaspers&#8217; comment, &quot;<strong><font color=\"#200020\">psychiatry is a hybrid scientific discipline that must include in its  research enterprise patients&rsquo; beliefs and culture,<\/font><\/strong>&quot; was about mental illness itself, it could equally be about the students of psychiatric illnesses like Kraepelin, and his &quot;beliefs and culture.&quot; Or for that matter, Jaspers&#8217; own concerns [from <a href=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/2013\/03\/07\/an-anniversary-2\/\" target=\"_blank\">an anniversary&hellip;<\/a>]:<\/div>\n<blockquote>\n<div align=\"justify\">As a philosopher, Jaspers, like many of his contemporaries, worried  about the human encounter with technology, science, and collective  institutions &ndash; seeing them as barriers to personal freedom. He urged a <em>Transcendence<\/em> of the limits of rational objectivism to achieve what he called <em>Existenz<\/em>  &ndash; an authentic subjectivity. Like so many, his career was suspended  during the Nazi era when he and his Jewish wife spent the war in fear of  the very kinds of technology and ideology he had written about. After  the war, he resumed teaching, writing about the German responsibility  for the atrocities of the Third Reich [<em>Die Shuldfrage<\/em>]. Where Jaspers&rsquo; <em>Allgemeine Psychopathologie<\/em> criticized Kraepelin for an <em>over<\/em>-reliance on a medical model, he would later criticize Freud for <em>over<\/em>-generalizing about human experience from a limited field of observation.<\/div>\n<\/blockquote>\n<div align=\"justify\">And Dr. Leon suggests that, &quot;<strong><em><font color=\"#200020\">At 100 years, we might speculate on what  Jaspers would think about the  current differences in diagnostic strategy  between the National  Institute of Mental Health&rsquo;s Research Domain  Criteria [RDoC]  and  DSM-5<\/font><\/em><\/strong>&quot; but then implies the answer his own rhetorical question &#8211; <em>Jaspers would&#8217;ve liked neither <\/em>[I would add <em>because they are both based on the same as yet unproven<\/em><em>&nbsp;<strike> opinion&nbsp;<\/strike> premise<\/em>].<\/div>\n<div align=\"center\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"314\" vspace=\"5\" height=\"148\" border=\"0\" src=\"http:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/images\/kjf.gif\" alt=\"Kraepelin, Jaspers, Freud\" title=\"Kraepelin, Jaspers, Freud\" \/><\/div>\n<div align=\"justify\">In the sanatoriums and asylums of a century ago, the majority of patients had brain syphilis, alcoholic dementias, or the brain disease [Group I, cerebral illness]. The minority had what Jaspers called Group II [Major Psychoses]. I had known of Kraepelin as the one who separated out the diseases in Jaspers Group II [Dementia Praecox AKA Schizophrenia and Manic Depressive Illness]. Freud was not a psychiatrist and knew little of such patients. He wrote about one case [from the patient&#8217;s autobiography]. His cases were outpatients with a different set of symptoms and &quot;illnesses.&quot; He couldn&#8217;t connect with psychotic patients and said so. Jaspers was writing about both groups of patients, and demarcated them with clear boundaries, as in my diagram [so <strike>did<\/strike> do I].<\/div>\n<p align=\"justify\">When the DSM-III came along, we suddenly had a new group &#8211; the neoKraepelinians &#8211; who following Kraepelin generalized the medical model which had kind of worked for the Major Psychoses to all mental illnesses &#8211; classifying based on symptoms. They included the neurotic patients, the behavioral syndromes, everything. It didn&#8217;t work for the psychoanalysts, the psychotherapists, the psychologists, the social workers, the counselors, etc. It did work for the insurance carriers, the medicare architects, the hospitals, the FDA, PHARMA, etc. because they had pigeon-holes to put people into [DRGs in medical parlance]. The medical justification was Kreapelin AKA neoKraepelin who apparently thought all mental illness was biological degeneracy of some kind and who had some weird ideas about how heredity worked. After reading more about Kraepelin, I find myself thinking that the neoKraepelinian Emil Kraepelin was a creation of the St. Louis psychiatry group &#8211; not the historical figure I&#8217;ve read about more recently. And I&#8217;m thinking now that the real Kraepein&#8217;s opinions about Jaspers Group III were more socio\/political prejudice than medical\/psychiatric observation.<\/p>\n<div align=\"justify\">Whatever the case, Karl Jaspers&#8217; 1913 reflections on mental illness were written in reaction against that medicalization of <u>all<\/u> mental illness one hundred years ago, and are particularly appropriate to our struggles with the same issues right here, right now. Leon wonders how Jaspers would react to the DSM-5 and RDoC. I wonder how he would react if he read the psychiatric news and the bulletins coming from the APA in New York right now. I expect he&#8217;d have plenty to say, but it would sound very much like what he said in 1913&#8230;<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>DSM-5 and the Research Domain Criteria: 100 Years After Jaspers&rsquo; General Psychopathology by Jose de Leon, M.D. American Journal of Psychiatry. 2014 171:492-494. In 1913, 30-year-old German psychiatrist Karl Jaspers published the first edition of General Psychopathology, in which he summarized current psychiatric knowledge and included his ideas regarding the methodological and scientific issues then [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_bbp_topic_count":0,"_bbp_reply_count":0,"_bbp_total_topic_count":0,"_bbp_total_reply_count":0,"_bbp_voice_count":0,"_bbp_anonymous_reply_count":0,"_bbp_topic_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_reply_count_hidden":0,"_bbp_forum_subforum_count":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-46043","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-politics"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/46043","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=46043"}],"version-history":[{"count":19,"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/46043\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":46069,"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/46043\/revisions\/46069"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=46043"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=46043"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/1boringoldman.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=46043"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}