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ICD-11 Psychotic Disorders: Preliminary Results of the Case-controlled Studies and the Russian Opinion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

M. Kulygina
Affiliation:
Department of Informatics and system research in psychiatry, Moscow Research Institute of Psychiatry MoH RF, Moscow, Russia
V. Krasnov
Affiliation:
Department of affective spectrum disorders, Moscow Research Institute of Psychiatry MoH RF, Moscow, Russia
P. Ponisovskiy
Affiliation:
Department of mental disorders – complicated by substance abuse, Moscow Research Institute of Psychiatry MoH RF, Moscow, Russia
J. Keeley
Affiliation:
Department of psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, USA
G. Reed
Affiliation:
Department of mental health and substance abuse, World Health Orgainzation, Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

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Introduction

One of the WHO's innovations for improving the ICD-11 chapter Mental and Behavioral Disorders was the creation of the Global Clinical Practice Network (GCPN), an international network of more than 12,000 mental health and primary care professionals from 144 countries.

Aims and objectives

In order to evaluate perceived clinical utility of the ICD-11 guidelines, the case-controlled field studies that involved the application of the proposed diagnostic guidelines to standardized case material were implemented via the Internet in different languages.

Method

Two hundred and seventy-eight Russian mental health care professionals, the GCPN members, have participated in case controlled Internet study for the chapter “Schizophrenia and Other Primary Psychotic Disorders”. Russian participants were represented by psychiatrists mostly (89%) and much less by psychologists (8%) which corresponds with the general situation in the Russian mental health care system.

Results

Russian clinicians have used the proposed ICD-11 diagnostic guidelines successfully to assess delusional disorder as well as schizophrenia. But there were certain categories (schizoaffective disorder, subthreshold delusions) with which the participants seemed to struggle. The critical comments were focused on opposing so called syndrome-based assessment and nosological diagnostics. Most concerns were about elimination of Schizophrenia subtypes.

Conclusion

Russian mental health care professionals proved to be interested in ICD revision process and demonstrated their special diagnostics opinion based on rich clinical traditions and psychopathological approach. In order to use ICD-11 guidelines in clinical practice more efficiently supplementary appropriate training would be needed.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-poster walk: Classification of mental disorders and cultural psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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