John Mac
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
People may also be at risk of persistent physical symptoms (PPS). Generally, these are defined as persistent bodily symptoms with functional disability but no explanatory structural pathology.
Somatic Symptom Disorder (SSD) is the corresponding diagnosis in the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual-V (DSM-V). It refers to persistent (6 months or more) and clinically significant somatic complaints accompanied by excessive and disproportionate health-related thoughts, feelings and behaviours regarding the symptoms (American Psychiatric Association, 2013).
Bodily Distress Disorder (BDD) is the diagnostic term used in the eleventh version of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD11). It requires both the presence of one or more distressing bodily symptoms, that can either be “medically unexplained” or caused by a general medical condition, with “excessive, disproportionate or maladaptive” responses to the symptoms.
Most importantly, both diagnostic terms include people with symptoms of distress related to medical conditions, for example, cancer, diabetes and heart disease. SSD describes a positive conceptualisation of symptoms based on presence of symptoms rather than absence of them. In addition, it moves beyond mind/body dualism, such that inexplicability does not equal psychiatric disorder, potentially leading to a better therapeutic alliance. Symptoms are not considered to be “in the mind” or solely due to distress (Chalder & Willis, 2018). For these reasons we prefer the diagnostic term SSD and will use it in the remainder of this article.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/09638237.2021.1875418
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