grahamg
Old codger
- Location
- South of Manchester, UK
I've quoted this lady elsewhere on the forum, but thought it worth posting these views she's expressed on "Parental Alienation Syndrome" here, (views I'd agree with I think):
"The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is a reliable document because the committees of psychiatrists agreed on what disorders should be included.
However, apart from where it deals with demonstrable brain injury, the DSM is not a valid document.
None of the mental disorders included in the DSM has been shown to have a demonstrable physical cause. Psychiatrists might talk about 'chemical imbalance in the brain' and genes that cause depression or schizophrenia, but there is no scientific evidence to support these ideas. The DSM is a collection of opinions. When the committees of psychiatrists change their opinions, a mental disorder might be removed from the DSM and some new one included. Different groups of interested people sponsor a new disorder and lobby for it to be included in a forthcoming revision of the DSM.
For instance, in 1985, an American psychologist, Dr. Richard Gardner, who had specialized in Iitigation involving parents and children, coined the term Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) to refer to the way some of the children of divorcing parents seem to show a preference to stay with one parent rather than the other. The preferred parent is deemed by the rejected parent to be influencing the child in making his choice.
Some of the people who believe in the existence of this disorder have been lobbying the psychiatrists who are responsible for the production of the next revision of the DSM to include PAS in the DSM IV. Parents who battle over the children caught in the parents' divorce always cause their children distress, and children who are distressed often do not behave well, but to say that the children have a mental disorder is monstrously unfair to the children. As no virus or brain lesion can be shown to cause PAS, whether it will be included in the DSM IV depends on the opinions of the men and women who are deciding what will go in the new volume.
Let us hope that none of them has gone through an acrimonious divorce that left them feeling bitter and vengeful, and that all of them really care about children."
"The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is a reliable document because the committees of psychiatrists agreed on what disorders should be included.
However, apart from where it deals with demonstrable brain injury, the DSM is not a valid document.
None of the mental disorders included in the DSM has been shown to have a demonstrable physical cause. Psychiatrists might talk about 'chemical imbalance in the brain' and genes that cause depression or schizophrenia, but there is no scientific evidence to support these ideas. The DSM is a collection of opinions. When the committees of psychiatrists change their opinions, a mental disorder might be removed from the DSM and some new one included. Different groups of interested people sponsor a new disorder and lobby for it to be included in a forthcoming revision of the DSM.
For instance, in 1985, an American psychologist, Dr. Richard Gardner, who had specialized in Iitigation involving parents and children, coined the term Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) to refer to the way some of the children of divorcing parents seem to show a preference to stay with one parent rather than the other. The preferred parent is deemed by the rejected parent to be influencing the child in making his choice.
Some of the people who believe in the existence of this disorder have been lobbying the psychiatrists who are responsible for the production of the next revision of the DSM to include PAS in the DSM IV. Parents who battle over the children caught in the parents' divorce always cause their children distress, and children who are distressed often do not behave well, but to say that the children have a mental disorder is monstrously unfair to the children. As no virus or brain lesion can be shown to cause PAS, whether it will be included in the DSM IV depends on the opinions of the men and women who are deciding what will go in the new volume.
Let us hope that none of them has gone through an acrimonious divorce that left them feeling bitter and vengeful, and that all of them really care about children."