Clinical utility of ICD‐11 diagnostic guidelines for high‐burden mental disorders: results from mental health settings in 13 countries — Geoffrey M. Reed (2018) | RDL Network
Clinical utility of ICD‐11 diagnostic guidelines for high‐burden mental disorders: results from mental health settings in 13 countries
Article 2018 en
Authors
GR
Geoffrey M. Reed
JK
Jared W. Keeley
TR
Tahilia J. Rebello
Abstract
1 min read
In this paper we report the clinical utility of the diagnostic guidelines for ICD-11 mental, behavioural and neurodevelopmental disorders as assessed by 339 clinicians in 1,806 patients in 28 mental health settings in 13 countries. Clinician raters applied the guidelines for schizophrenia and other primary psychotic disorders, mood disorders (depressive and bipolar disorders), anxiety and fear-related disorders, and disorders specifically associated with stress. Clinician ratings of the clinical utility of the proposed ICD-11 diagnostic guidelines were very positive overall. The guidelines were perceived as easy to use, corresponding accurately to patients' presentations (i.e., goodness of fit), clear and understandable, providing an appropriate level of detail, taking about the same or less time than clinicians' usual practice, and providing useful guidance about distinguishing disorder from normality and from other disorders. Clinicians evaluated the guidelines as less useful for treatment selection and assessing prognosis than for communicating with other health professionals, though the former ratings were still positive overall. Field studies that assess perceived clinical utility of the proposed ICD-11 diagnostic guidelines among their intended users have very important implications. Classification is the interface between health encounters and health information; if clinicians do not find that a new diagnostic system provides clinically useful information, they are unlikely to apply it consistently and faithfully. This would have a major impact on the validity of aggregated health encounter data used for health policy and decision making. Overall, the results of this study provide considerable reason to be optimistic about the perceived clinical utility of the ICD-11 among global clinicians.
Geoffrey M. Reed, Pratap Sharan, Tahilia J. Rebello, Jared W. Keeley, María Elena Medina‐Mora, Oye Gureje, José Luís Ayuso‐Mateos, Shigenobu Kanba, Brigitte Khoury, Cary S. Kogan, В. Краснов, Mario Maj, Jair de Jesus Mari, Dan Joseph Stein, Min Zhao, Tsuyoshi Akiyama, Howard Andrews, Elson Asevedo, Majda Cheour, Tecelli Domínguez‐Martínez, Joseph El‐Khoury, Andrea Fiorillo, Jean Grenier, Nitin Gupta, Lola Kola, Maya Kulygina, Itziar Leal‐Leturia, Mario Luciano, Bulumko Lusu, Joaquín Nicolás, I. Martínez-López, Chihiro Matsumoto, Lucky Onofa, Sabrina Paterniti, Shivani Purnima, Rebeca Robles, Manoj Kumar Sahu, Goodman Sibeko, Na Zhong, Michael B. First, Wolfgang Gäebel, Anne M. Lovell, Toshimasa Maruta, Michael C. Roberts, Kathleen M. Pike
Geoffrey M. Reed, Michael B. First, Cary S. Kogan, Steven E. Hyman, Oye Gureje, Wolfgang Gäebel, Mario Maj, Dan Joseph Stein, Andreas Maercker, Peter Tyrer, Angélica Medeiros Claudino, Elena Garralda, Luis Salvador‐Carulla, Rajat Ray, John B. Saunders, Tarun Dua, Vladimir Poznyak, María Elena Medina‐Mora, Kathleen M. Pike, José Luís Ayuso‐Mateos, Shigenobu Kanba, Jared W. Keeley, Brigitte Khoury,
Dan Joseph Stein, Péter Szatmári, Wolfgang Gäebel, Michael Berk, Eduard Vieta, Mario Maj, Ymkje Anna de Vries, Annelieke M. Roest, Peter de Jonge, Andreas Maercker, Chris R. Brewin, Kathleen M. Pike, Carlos M. Grilo, Naomi Fineberg, Peer Briken, Peggy T. Cohen‐Kettenis, Geoffrey M. Reed
Michael B. First, Wolfgang Gäebel, Mario Maj, Dan Joseph Stein, Cary S. Kogan, John B. Saunders, Vladimir Poznyak, Oye Gureje, Roberto Lewis‐Fernández, Andreas Maercker, Chris R. Brewin, Marylène Cloître, Angélica Medeiros Claudino, Kathleen M. Pike, Gillian Baird, David Skuse, Richard B. Krueger, Peer Briken, Jeffrey D. Burke, John E. Lochman, Spencer C. Evans, Douglas W. Woods,
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