According to current proposals for ICD-11, stereotyped movement disorder will be classified in the grouping of neurodevelopmental disorders, with a qualifier to indicate whether self-injury is present, similar to the classification of stereotypic movement disorder in DSM-5. At the same time, the WHO ICD-11 Working Group on the Classification of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders has proposed a grouping of body-focused repetitive behavior disorders within the obsessive-compulsive and related disorders (OCRD) cluster to include trichotillomania and skin-picking disorder. DSM-5 has taken a slightly different approach: trichotillomania and excoriation (skin picking) disorder are included in the OCRD grouping, while body-focused repetitive behavior disorder is listed under other specified forms of OCRD. DSM-5 also includes a separate category of nonsuicidal self-injury in the section on "conditions for further study." There are a number of unresolved nosological questions regarding the relationships among stereotyped movement disorder, body-focused repetitive behavior disorders, and nonsuicidal self-injury. In this article, we attempt to provide preliminary answers to some of these questions as they relate to the ICD-11 classification of mental and behavioral disorders.
Jon E. Grant, Murad Atmaca, Naomi Fineberg, Leonardo F. Fontenelle, Hisato Matsunaga, Y. C. Janardhan Reddy, H. Blair Simpson, Per Hove Thomsen, Odile A. van den Heuvel, David Veale, Douglas W. Woods, Dan Joseph Stein
John W. Barnhill, Mayumi Okuda, H. Blair Simpson, Dan Joseph Stein, H. Blair Simpson, Katharine A. Phillips, Katharine A. Phillips, David Mataix‐Cols, Lorena Fernández de la Cruz, Dan Joseph Stein
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