The role of diagnosis in counselling and psychotherapy

by The Open University

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4 The survival of diagnosis

What you have read so far suggests that we should be more sceptical about diagnosis and try to understand distress both as part of the human condition and as a vehicle for avoiding an honest acknowledgement of our challenges and responsibilities in life. Despite this invitation to cast doubt on the simple view of anxiety and depression as being medical (rather than existential) conditions, the diagnostic view still prevails in many quarters. That view places all of the complexities and biographical idiosyncrasies of particular symptom presentations into pre-formed categories preferred by professionals (remember, this approach started with those like Kraepelin, who believed in the objective existence of natural categories of mental illness). In the light of those agreeing and disagreeing with a categorical view, we can now see the following sort of dynamic debate about diagnosis:

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