The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) is a handbook that provides guidelines for clinicians who diagnose psychiatric illnesses. Each condition is given a code and a clear set of criteria that must be met for diagnosis.
The latest edition, DSM-5, was released by the American Psychiatric Association in May 2013. The DSM-5 replaced the DSM-IV, which had been in use since 1994.
With each new edition of the DSM, the diagnostic criteria for certain disorders may be changed, including depression. Some disorders have been removed, while others have been modified or added.
The following is a look at how depression is diagnosed, including an overview of the changes that came with the DSM-5 and what those changes mean for healthcare providers and patients.
Depression is a common mental health disorder, with approximately one in five U.S. adults experiencing a diagnosis in their lifetime. If you are concerned that you may be experiencing symptoms of depression, it's important to reach out to a medical or mental health professional.
While there are online resources, screenings, and quizzes available, they do not always come from reliable sources and cannot definitively diagnose any medical or mental health condition.
However, you may find it helpful to use an online quiz or screening tool to assess your symptoms and organize them to take to your doctor or therapist. Having this information on hand can help you broach the topic of depression.
The online questionnaires will ask you about your life and your feelings. Often, they take the form of a checklist with many "Yes" or "No" questions that you check off if they apply to you.
For example, you may be asked to check a box if the following questions are true for you:
While there is an abundance of self-tests for depression on the internet, they don't all come from reputable sources. You will not be able to self-diagnose a medical or mental health condition with a quiz or checklist, but these online tools can help you initiate a conversation with your doctor or therapist.
Some questionnaires will ask you to rate your responses to a statement on a numerical scale. At one end, a 0 might indicate that a statement does not apply to you at all, and at the other end, a 10 might indicate that the statement applies to you all the time.
For example, you might be asked to rate how much you identify with the following statements by selecting a number from 0 to 10, where 0 means "Never" and 10 means "Always."
Screening tools may also ask personal questions about your habits and lifestyle, such as whether you are married, go to work or school, or use substances.
A medical or mental health professional will also ask you these types of questions to help assess for possible contributions to depression, such as the loss of a spouse or job or the use of alcohol or drugs.
Medical and mental health professionals use established, research-backed guidelines, screening tools, checklists, and other criteria to help them make a diagnosis of depression.
A provider can use these tools to guide them through observing and talking to a person who might be experiencing symptoms of depression. For example, taking note of whether a person is showered and appropriately dressed, the tone and speed of their speech, and other aspects of their appearance and demeanor can provide clues.
Asking direct questions about a person's day-to-day life and their feelings can also provide valuable insight into the cause of a person's depressive symptoms. In some cases, a person may have symptoms of depression but not have a major depressive disorder.
Providers also use these guidelines to go through a list of other possible causes for a person's symptoms that might be easily overlooked. Certain medical conditions and medications can cause symptoms of depression that will generally improve once the underlying cause is addressed.
In these cases, the guidelines may suggest that a provider refers the person to a colleague for additional testing or examinations. For example, if a doctor thinks a person's symptoms could be stemming from a brain lesion, they may want them to see a neurologist or have an MRI scan.
A person who is using alcohol or illicit drugs may have depressive symptoms that are related to their substance use. In this case, a screening tool may alert a doctor to test their blood or urine for certain drugs or refer them to an addiction treatment center.
While the DSM-5 doesn't introduce any new diagnostic tests for depression, it promotes a new “integrated” approach for clinicians to diagnose mental health disorders.
Clinicians who were used to using the older methods for diagnosing depression didn't have to completely change how they approached the process with the DSM-5, as the new integrated approach is compatible with previous assessment tools.
The DSM-5 includes new scales for assessing suicide risk: one for adults and one for adolescents. These scales are intended to help clinicians identify suicide risk in patients as they are developing treatment plans.
If you are having suicidal thoughts, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline toll-free in the U.S. at 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255) or visit suicidepreventionlifeline.org. The Lifeline provides free and confidential support 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
The tools are included in the new Section III of the DSM-5 and are intended to better support clinicians in identifying risk factors for suicide as well as scales for assessing suicidal behaviors (which includes differentiating self-harm from suicide attempts).
To be diagnosed with major depression, a person's symptoms must fit the criteria outlined in the DSM-5.
No significant changes were made to the diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder with the introduction of the DSM-5. The core symptoms, as well as the requirement for the symptoms to have lasted for at least two weeks, remain the same from previous editions.
The DSM-5 reminds clinicians to assess patients with depression for symptoms of mania and hypomania. The presence of these symptoms may indicate the new specifier for depression, “with mixed features,” should be added.
In addition to the diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder, the changes published in the DSM-5 included the addition of new depressive mood disorders and specifiers.
One major area of change in the DSM-5 was the addition of two new depressive disorders: disruptive mood dysregulation disorder (DMDD) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD).
The diagnosis of DMDD is reserved for children between the ages of 6 and 18 who demonstrate persistent irritability and frequent episodes of out-of-control behavior. The age of onset must be before the age of 10. The diagnosis was added to address concerns that bipolar disorder in children was being overdiagnosed.
PMDD is a more severe form of premenstrual syndrome (PMS). The conditions are characterized by intense depression, anxiety, moodiness, and irritability related to the hormonal fluctuations throughout the menstrual cycle.
PMDD previously appeared in Appendix B of the DSM-IV under "Criteria Sets and Axes Provided for Further Study." In the DSM-5, PMDD appears in the depressive disorders section.
Another change addresses the way chronic depression is conceptualized and distinguished from episodic depression. Dysthymia (or dysthymic disorder) is now included under the umbrella of persistent depressive disorder (PDD).
Persistent depressive disorder also includes chronic major depression, which was added because researchers did not find a significant difference between dysthymia and chronic major depression.
The DSM-5 also added several new specifiers for depression, including: