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The diagnostic validity of mental health diagnoses in children

Christopher C Pearson
Med J Aust 2017; 206 (2): 70. || doi: 10.5694/mja16.01265
Published online: 6 February 2017

We must take heed of as many factors as possible when forming a diagnosis

The Short Report by Whitely and colleagues in this edition of the Journal1 raises the question of the diagnostic validity of mental health diagnoses in children, which, unlike diagnoses in adults, are complicated by the additional factor of continuing mental and physical development.

The diagnosis of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) requires a clinical review of the child, collecting evidence from multiple sources for a problem affecting the child’s performance, and applying a diagnostic checklist, such as that provided by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of the American Psychiatric Association.2 This checklist has been operationalised in the Conners Comprehensive Behavior Rating Scales,3 which provide a score for the likelihood of the diagnosis of ADHD.

Despite the efforts to achieve objectivity, there are several subjective elements in this assessment. These include the ability of the parent to provide an accurate history of the child’s behaviour, the behaviour of the child in the consulting room, and the bias of the assessor. The next area of variability is the attitude of the informants who complete the parent and teacher rating scales, including whether they support or oppose the diagnosis. Clinicians and others who work in this area will at times notice a significant divergence between the views of the child’s parents, particularly if they are separated; one parent, for instance, may gloss over behavioural deviations, seen by others as affecting the child’s developmental performance and social acceptance by the child’s peer group, with comments that he is “just being a boy”.4

A further factor is the child’s response to medication. Good medical practice demands that the risks and benefits of medication be comprehensively discussed with the parents before starting treatment. The decision to commence medication should never be taken lightly, and a detailed discussion of the potential side effects is needed before commencing treatment. As with most mental health diagnoses, there are no objective tests for securing the diagnosis or monitoring the effectiveness of treatment. When a response to medication seems sustained, the effect can be tested by withdrawing the drug; if there is a distinct deterioration in performance, this should be taken as evidence for the effectiveness of treatment.

As ADHD is defined according to DSM criteria, we must consider the reliability of such a diagnosis. The DSM, now in its fifth revision (DSM-5), is not without its critics, particularly with regard to its reliability; that is, the reproducibility of a diagnosis by different clinicians examining the same patient.5 One measure of this reliability is Cohen’s kappa coefficient, a numerical value for the likelihood of two clinicians making the same diagnosis; a value of 1 indicates total inter-rater concordance, while 0 means the probability of agreement is no greater than chance. Kraemer and colleagues have discussed the reliability of diagnoses according to DSM-5 criteria, and they are prepared to accept a kappa value of 0.2 to 0.4 as “acceptable”.6 This does not engender great confidence when undertaking studies such as that described by Whitely and his co-authors.1

Where do my musings bring us in the real life situation of the consulting room? I can but suggest that we take heed of as many factors as possible when forming a diagnosis, and that we have a careful discussion with the parents before initiating treatment. Should we recommend medication, it should be viewed as a trial looking for clear evidence of benefit; and if side effects occur, they should not outweigh the benefits when we evaluate the response of the child. Finally, the period of treatment should be limited, and medication re-commenced only should there be evidence of clinical deterioration following its withdrawal.7


Provenance: Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Christopher C Pearson

  • Women's and Children's Hospital, Adelaide, SA



Competing interests:

No relevant disclosures.

  • 1. Whitely M, Lester L, Phillimore J, Robinson S. Influence of birth month on the probability of Western Australian children being treated for ADHD. Med J Aust 2017; 206: 85.
  • 2. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. DSM-5. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2013.
  • 3. Conners CK. Conners CBRS. Conners Comprehensive Behavior Rating Scales [website]. http://www.mhs.com/product.aspx?gr=edu&id=overview&prod=cbrs (accessed Nov 2016).
  • 4. Stein MT, Diller L, Resnikoff R. ADHD, divorce, and parental disagreement about the diagnosis and treatment. Pediatrics 2001; 107 Suppl 1: 867-872.
  • 5. Thomason TC. Criticisms, benefits, and limitations of the DSM-5. 2014. https://works.bepress.com/timothy_thomason/117/download/ (accessed Nov 2016).
  • 6. Kraemer HC, Kupfer DJ, Clarke DE, et al. DSM-5: how reliable is reliable enough? Am J Psychiatry 2012; 169: 12-13.
  • 7. National Health and Medical Research Council. Clinical practice points on the diagnosis, assessment and management of attention deficit hyperactivity in children and adolescents. Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia, 2012. https://www.nhmrc.gov.au/guidelines-publications/mh26 (accessed Nov 2016).

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access_time 09:26, 6 February 2017
George Halasz

This is a most timely Editorial questioning the diagnostic validity of the mental health diagnosis of children with ADHD.

The observation that limiting factors for validity of diagnoses '... include the ability of the parent to provide an accurate history of the child’s behaviour, the behaviour of the child in the consulting room, and the bias of the assessor.' highlights the complexity that clinicians confront daily. In time-pressed clinical practice it is easy to see why the differential diagnosis are often bypassed or not considered in cases of 'ADHD'.

What needs to be added to the sources of invalid diagnoses is the fact that the last 30 years of early attachment research - infant/caregiver - which all point to and underline the precursor of relational trauma to the later 'attention' and 'behaviour' problems.

In my clinical experience as a child psychiatrist for over 30 years, these earliest attachment patterns now come added with neuroscience-backed evidence which pinpoints to how early attachment trauma and dissociation in infancy, in time-poor clinical practice is often totally overlooked in the history taking, results in especially right-brain changes in the infant.

These new research findings are now incorporated in routine clinical assessments.

So I would suggest that not only is there a possible 'bias of the assessor' as noted, but the additional fact that our medical knowledge base of the causes of 'attention deficit' and 'behaviour dysregulation' are undergoing a 'paradigm change'.

This means that our knowledge base of factors that impact on infant development, including the causes of attention deficit and behavioural dysregulation, and their continuities from infancy to childhood and even later, are embedded in the pathogenic mechanism that arise from relational trauma.

The research evidence is overwhelming, supported by clinical experience, that such relational trauma alters the right-brain development of infants - and without specific intervention these alterations can and do persist with continuities of symptoms into later life.

Specific symptoms include attention and behavioural dysregulation, which, by the way, are not only the symptoms of ADHD but also of relational trauma and dissociation in infancy.

Of course I do realise that the diagnosis of 'relational trauma' is often confused with 'developmental', 'attachment' or 'emotional' trauma, yet all these terms merely refer to different facets of the same neuropathological consequence of the individual child being 'overwhelmed' with irreversible stress, resulting in the bottom-line survival defence of dissociation, which kicks in after the infant's ordinary autonomic nervous system based defence responses - fight, flight, freeze and faint reactions - have been exhausted.

Competing Interests: No relevant disclosures

Dr George Halasz
Monash University

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