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COMMENTARY 

DSM-5’s Bereavement Bind: Time for an Independent Review

By Ronald W. Pies, MD | April 6, 2012

Opponents in the now well-worn, “Bereavement Exclusion” (BE) debate can probably agree on one thing: of all the proposed changes in the DSM-5, the move to eliminate the bereavement exclusion has ignited the most intense emotional reaction among the general public.1 It’s no wonder: the deeply painful experience of losing a loved one is almost universally understood. In an important sense, nearly everyone is an “expert” in the matter of bereavement.

To be sure, there have been sincere and thoughtful critiques on both sides of the debate, as discussed recently by my colleague, James Knoll, IV, MD.2 There have also been some vitriolic, over-the-top attacks directed at the DSM-5 Mood Disorders Work Group; the American Psychiatric Association (APA); and psychiatrists who favor the elimination of the Bereavement Exclusion. By way of disclosure: I do favor elimination of the BE, and I am a member of the American Psychiatric Association. However, I am not a part of any DSM-5 work group, nor have I conveyed any formal recommendations to the APA or the DSM-5 task force members—until now.

(MORE: Why Psychiatrists Must Confront Gun-related Violence)

I believe it is time for the issue of the bereavement exclusion to be reviewed by an independent, “blue ribbon,” scientific panel—ideally, under the auspices of the NIMH, the National Academy of Sciences, or the National Science Foundation. Why now, and why this particular issue? Actually, I have called for independent review of the entire DSM-5 project on several occasions; but given the increasing public uproar over the BE, I believe that an independent review is necessary to restore public confidence in whatever decision the Work Group ultimately makes. Recently, I have also been canvassing the directors of mood disorder programs in the United States, and—while only a handful have responded so far—I have been surprised by the spectrum of views regarding the BE. While none of the mood disorder experts endorsed the view that the BE is based on sound science—a sobering but not at all surprising finding—several questioned the wisdom of eliminating the BE from DSM-5. These doubts were usually framed in terms of the public’s perception of psychiatry, rather than of disagreement with the evidence supporting elimination of the BE.

Alas, as things stand, members of the Mood Disorders Work Group are caught between the proverbial rock and a hard place. If they simply reverse themselves and retain the BE in the DSM-5, critics of psychiatry will loudly denounce the “politics” of psychiatric diagnosis and accuse the Work Group of “caving in” to public pressure. If they simply hold fast to their current position of eliminating the BE, the Work Group will be excoriated for “medicalizing normal grief” and “handing a gift to the pharmaceutical companies!” My hope is that an independent panel’s recommendation will help guide the Work Group out of this knotty double-bind, toward a feasible solution. I also think it essential that the DSM-5 Work Group tries to harmonize their decision with the forthcoming ICD-11 (International Classification of Disease, 11th ed). It is important to note that the ICD classification of mood disorders has never endorsed a formal “bereavement exclusion” in the diagnosis of major depression.

The question of eliminating the BE is complicated by 2 subsidiary problems inherent in the DSM-IV. The first is the arbitrary and unhelpful “2 week/2 month” conundrum. The “2 weeks” refers to the minimum duration required for establishing a major depressive episode; and derivatively, for diagnosing major depressive disorder (MDD). My colleagues and I believe that, for most patients, 2 weeks is too short a time to permit a confident diagnosis of MDD—whether after bereavement, or any other major loss (divorce, job loss, etc.).3 In a few cases—for example, when a patient presents with virtually the same depressive symptoms as in one or more previous episodes of MDD—the 2-week minimum may make sense. It also makes sense when melancholic features are present. But for most non-melancholic patients with no previous bouts of MDD, presenting to a clinician only 2 weeks after a major loss, I believe waiting an additional 1 to 2 weeks is prudent, before reaching a formal diagnosis. The additional time permits a more accurate assessment of the patient’s “trajectory,” with respect to functional capacity, symptom intensity, and suicidal risk. The added interval also permits a better determination of what, if any, treatment is indicated.

The other part of the conundrum is the procrustean DSM-IV guideline regarding “normal” bereavement. This V-code diagnosis extends for only 2 months after the loss, and applies only in the absence of certain “severity” indicators, such as marked functional impairment, suicidal intentions, and marked psychomotor retardation. As many experts on grieving have argued—and as millions of bereaved individuals know—this 2-month limit is both arbitrary and misleading. “Normal” grief is highly individualized, and may extend for many months, or even years, after the death of a loved one. Ordinary grief also has a characteristic “phenomenology” that distinguishes it from MDD, as well as from “complicated grief” (CG) (which may find its way into the DSM-5 in the guise of “Adjustment Disorder Related to Bereavement”).4

Any decision regarding the bereavement exclusion should also take into account the “2 week/2 month” conundrum. My personal preference would be for elimination of the BE, accompanied by (1) expansion of the 2-week minimum MDD interval to 3 to 4 weeks; and (2) elimination of the 2-month limit on normal bereavement. If the 2-week criterion is not formally changed, the text of the DSM-5 should at least reflect the need for flexibility and clinical judgment in applying the MDD duration criterion.

True: making too many changes in one’s diagnostic system is always fraught with risk; however, the guiding principle should be what is best for our patients, and what the best evidence tells us—not an unreasoned allegiance to arbitrary and outdated criteria. Indeed, this is precisely why the BE itself should be shown the diagnostic door. Perhaps most important, clinicians need a clearer description of ordinary grief following bereavement. This could be provided in the DSM-5 text, as well as in a “V” code for “Ordinary Grief of Bereavement”—which, of course, would not be deemed a “mental disorder.” Ultimately, I hope that we are able to develop screening tools to help clinicians distinguish bereavement-related grief from MDD and complicated grief.5

Regardless of the final decision re: the BE, the APA leadership will have its work cut out for it, on 2 levels: first, in educating psychiatric and primary care physicians in the nuances of the new guidelines; and second, in explaining to the general public why these significant changes were made. To be sure, physicians—particularly those in primary care—will need more robust education as to when antidepressants are and are not the most appropriate treatment for MDD. But this is a didactic challenge, not a diagnostic issue; and the DSM criteria should not be molded into vehicles of social engineering.

Since the DSM-5 is to be finalized this fall, an independent review of the bereavement exclusion needs to be initiated immediately. I believe it could be completed within 4 to 6 months, and—if the reviewers maintain “science in the public interest” as their preeminent concern—I believe the review will support elimination of the bereavement exclusion. In any event, I envision this as an advisory opinion to aid the DSM-5 Work Group—not as a binding determination. There is precedent for this model; for example, the FDA does not always take the recommendations of its advisory committees. I believe the “final call” on the BE should still be up to the DSM-5 Task Force and leadership. And that decision should be based not on popularity polls or public outcries, but on the best scientific evidence and the best interests of our patients.

Acknowledgment: I want to thank Dr Sidney Zisook for his comments on an earlier draft of this piece.

 

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by Ronald Pies | May 03, 2012 9:36 PM EDT

Update on the DSM-5 and Bereavement Exclusion (BE):

As of April 17, 2012, The DSM-5 Mood Disorders Work-group was still recommending the elimination of the bereavement exclusion, "...in light of evidence that "the similarities between bereavement-related
depression and depression related to other stressful life events substantially outweigh their
differences"(Kendler et al., 2008). If they stick to this position, it will be a significant step forward, in my
view, particularly in the face of so much external pressure to reverse course and retain the scientifically unfounded bereavement exclusion. It also appears that the DSM-5 will drop the "2 month limit" on normal bereavement, which would be a big step forward, and should also mollify some critics of the (provisional) decision to drop the BE.

The mood disorders work group has recommended a brief notation in the criteria for Major Depressive Episode and Major Depressive Disorder, to the effect that:

"The normal and expected response to an event involving significant loss
(e.g, bereavement, financial ruin, natural disaster), including feelings of
intense sadness, rumination about the loss, insomnia, poor appetite and weight
loss, may resemble a depressive episode. The presence of symptoms such as
feelings of worthlessness, suicidal ideas (as distinct from wanting to join
a deceased loved one), psychomotor retardation, and severe impairment of
overall function suggest the presence of a Major Depressive Episode in
addition to the normal response to a significant loss.

http://www.dsm5.org/ProposedRevision/Pages/proposedrevision.aspx?rid=44

In my view, while this footnote may be technically correct--and no longer instructs the clinician to
withhold the diagnosis of major depression from a patient with major depressive symptoms in the
context of recent bereavement--it does not go far enough, and places too much reliance
on a few key features, such as psychomotor retardation and suicidal ideation. Clinicians should be given a much richer and deeper understanding of the substantial psychological differences between ordinary grief and
major depression, as detailed in many articles (e.g., Lamb K, Pies R, Zisook S. The Bereavement
Exclusion for the Diagnosis of Major Depression: To be, or not to be. Psychiatry. 2010;7(7):19-25. PMCID: 2922362.).

On the positive side, the footnote implicitly conveys the view that the loss of a loved one does not confer
a "special status" on the loss, in terms of excluding a major depressive disorder; i.e., feelings of
intense sadness, rumination about the loss, insomnia, poor appetite and weight loss may follow any
major loss, such as a divorce, break-up of a relationship, job loss, etc. Naturally, there are unique issues that arise in the psychotherapy of patients who have just experienced the loss of a loved one--particularly the death of a child, as many grief specialists have pointed out. But how we approach a major loss in the course of psychotherapy is logically distinct from how we set up our diagnostic criteria for major depressive disorder.

The DSM-5 is not likely to change the 2-week minimum duration for MDD. It remains my view that two weeks
is usually too brief a period to make any confident diagnoses, after any major loss; thus, I would prefer a modification of the criteria for MDE/MDD, such that 3 weeks is the usual minimal duration for the diagnosis.
In practical terms, clinicians may well want to defer a diagnosis of MDD for an additional 1-2 weeks, in the
unlikely event they evaluate a depressed patient with literally only 2 weeks of symptoms, after a recent major loss. (Most such patients brought to a psychiatrist so early after a loss would probably be exhibiting suicidality, psychotic features, or severe functional incapacity, in which cases the bereavement exclusion would not apply anyway).

All in all--and assuming the DSM-5 sticks to its position--I think the changes described represent an advance in the way we conceptualize major depression, and provide for more appropriate treatment of bereaved patients who meet all symptom and duration criteria for major depression. But we shall see what the final DSM-5 document actually says!

Ron Pies MD

by Ronald Pies | April 13, 2012 6:03 PM EDT

I would also like to thank Dr. Amos for his interesting discussion of the controversy, on his blog site:

http://jajsamos.wordpress.com/tag/grief-and-depression/

Thanks, Jim!

Best regard,
Ron Pies

by Ronald Pies | April 10, 2012 10:08 PM EDT

Dear Jim--

Many thanks for your kind note, and for your interest in my PBPI. I would like you and all readers to know that they are free not only to reference the scale and the article, but also to use the PBPI in their clinical work--I have placed no restrictions on its use, and I'm eager to find out if it "performs"as I hope it will. My only concern was not to misrepresent the PBPI as an already-validated instrument, like the Beck Depression Inventory. As you note, it has not yet been validated, and so, for medico-legal reasons, I would not want clinicians to rely on it as if it has been field-tested.

That said, I would encourage a sort of "beta testing" phase, in which clinicians try to ascertain the utility and predictive properties of the PBPI. For example, it would be a simple test of its utility to determine if a strong "left sided" (depressive) pattern were prospectively associated with poor vocational function, or likelihood of hospitalization. Similarly, one could investigate whether a pattern of "5,9,10" checked off on the left-suggesting feelings of worthlessness, anhedonia, and psychomotor retardation-is correlated with a DSM diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder, as I would anticipate. Conversely, a clinician could test whether a strong, right-sided response (suggestive of "normal bereavement") is prospectively associated with rapid return to work, or with good ability to function at home. So, please feel free to use this in a heuristic way, Dr. Amos, and I'd be very interested in any findings from you and other colleagues!

Best regards,
Ron Pies MD

by James Amos | April 10, 2012 11:37 AM EDT

I really liked your Post-Bereavement Phenomenology Inventory (PBPI), which you included in that outstanding post on February 21, 2012 in Psychiatric Times. I think an instrument like this would be welcomed by primary care clinicians as well as psychiatrists. I can see why you would rather not have the tool be disseminated prior to validation studies. I wonder if I could just mention the scale by name and attribute it to you without copying it in one of my own blog posts.
James Amos, MD
Blog: The Practical Psychosomaticist: James Amos, M.D.

Related content

APA Approves DSM-5: Final Stages Under Way

Bereavement and the DSM-5, One Last Time

DSM-5’s Bereavement Bind: Time for an Independent Review

After Bereavement, Is It “Normal Grief” or Major Depression?

Prototype Matching Predicts Psychopathology Better Than DSM-IV

Also by Dr Ronald Pies

The Madness of a Stranger—In Our House

Moving Beyond Hatred of Psychiatry: A Brave Voice Speaks Out

DSM-5’s Bereavement Bind: Time for an Independent Review

After Bereavement, Is It “Normal Grief” or Major Depression?

Once Again: Grief Is Not a Disorder, But It May Be Accompanied by Major Depression

Mental Illness Is No Metaphor: Five Uneasy Pieces

Why Psychiatrists Must Confront Gun-related Violence





References
1. Francis A. More than 65,000 grievers must be heard—and should be heeded. Psychiatr Times.  March 6, 2012. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/blog/frances/content/article/10168/2042902.
2. Knoll JL. Sinking into grief. Psychiatr Times. April 2, 2012. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/display/article/10168/2054050.
3. Lamb K, Pies R, Zisook S. The Bereavement Exclusion for the diagnosis of major depression: to be or not to be? Psychiatry (Edgemont). 2010;7:19-25.
4. Zisook S, Simon N, Reynolds C, et al. Bereavement, complicated grief, and DSM, part 2: complicated grief. J Clin Psychiatry. 2010;71:1097-1098.
5. Pies R. After bereavement, is it “normal grief” or major depression? Psychiatr Times. Feb. 21, 2012. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/blog/pies/content/article/10168/2035804


 
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