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S.21/E.15

Rethinking DX: A Digital DSM

“Rethinking DX: A Digital DSM” looks at how the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) quietly shapes almost every part of mental health care—from who gets a diagnosis and insurance coverage to how people understand their own symptoms and identities.

 

In this conversation, Lita and Jean Marie unpack what the DSM actually is, why the current DSM‑5‑TR matters, and how a future, fully digital “DSM‑6” could function as a living document that updates more quickly, links to decision‑support tools, and better integrates real‑world data from electronic health records.​

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They explore the growing push to move beyond symptom checklists and include factors like biology and inflammation, social determinants (poverty, racism, housing instability, community violence), culture and language, life stage, trauma history, and even nutrition and the gut–brain connection when understanding mental health.

 

The episode also imagines what a visit with a clinician using a digital DSM might look like—from plain‑language criteria and prompts about trauma and physical health, to culturally sensitive questions and age‑specific guidance—while encouraging listeners to bring their whole story to appointments, ask how environment and biology interact in their own case, and get involved in shaping future DSM updates through advocacy and lived‑experience input.​

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