How to Diagnos Addiction
Criteria for diagnosing addiction
The DSM-IV is the diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. This is a handbook, published by the American Psychiatric Association, which is used by mental health care professionals that lists different categories of mental disorders and the criteria for diagnosing them. The DSM-IV is used all around the world by clinicians, psychiatric drug regulation agencies, researchers, health insurance companies, pharmaceutical companies and policy makers.
Some criteria from the DSM-IV that may qualify someone for the disease of addiction are as follows:
- You reduce or completely blow off your social, school of recreational activities.
- You increase your time and energy spent on using or getting substances to use.
- You have tolerance; it takes more than it used to in order to feel an effect.
- You have symptoms of withdrawal (i.e. hangovers, irritability, sleeping after binges, “crashing”)
- You have unsuccessful or persistent efforts to cut down or control your using, or you have consequences of using.
- You use longer than you intended to of you use for a longer period of time than you intended to.
- You continue to use even though you know it causes physical of psychological problems or despite knowing that it aggravates a physical of psychological problem.
- You continue to use despite legal consequences.
- You continue to use despite poor performance/consequences at school or work.
You can have the disease of addiction with or without physiological (physical/body) dependence. This means that even if your body isn’t addicted to drugs or alcohol, you may still have the psychological dependence.
Labels: addiction, alcohol, Drugs, Health care, health-insurance, teens



3 Comments:
well sounds about right..
the fact is reading it sounds miserable.. i ask myself how anyone could live like that.. but in all reality there have been things in my life that have been that "addiction." when you are engrossed in an addiction, it doesnt seem bad when you are in it. it does take an outsider and guidelines to show exactly whats going on when you are in that state of denial.
I agree with this cryteria of diagnosing substance abuse. I have witnesed people with some/all of these symtoms. They can not socially
or recreationaly use without consequences.
Thank God for rehabs. Some of us really do want to stay clean and sober. It's hard to believe that some just check themselves in for a break.
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