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The focus of this study is not about what it is like to have a mental disorder, but instead the diagnostic experience.
Some people find diagnoses helpful, but some find them upsetting and harmful. Research is therefore needed to improve diagnostic processes. It has been suggested that patient experiences and outcomes may be affected by the diagnostic tools used, including diagnostic criteria, labels and language. In the NHS, the tool used by doctors to help diagnose people is a guidebook called the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). A new version of this guide is due to be released in 2018.
This project will use focus groups to ask people who use mental health services and diagnosing doctors in those services what they think about the labels and language in the new guide. The investigators can then suggest changes before the guide is published. The investigators hope that this research will improve mental health diagnosis. The research will take place in Norfolk and Suffolk and span eight months.
Full description
This is a qualitative project requested by the World Health Organisation (WHO), and planned by Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust and the University of East Anglia. The research aims and design have been developed in consultation with service users, clinicians, academics and the World Health Organisation (WHO). These groups have told the investigators that mental health diagnosis can have unintended, negative consequences. This is supported by a large body of existing research. It has been suggested that patient experiences and outcomes may be affected by the diagnostic classifications used (i.e. labels and language). The investigators plan to explore service users' and clinicians' views on the proposed ICD-11 diagnostic classifications. To do this, the investigators will provide participants with the proposed ICD-11 diagnostic classification relevant to their experience, and conduct focus groups to explore people's views of the new diagnostic classifications, including judgement about the clinical accuracy, the language used, what people think is helpful and unhelpful, and what could be improved. The topic guide for the focus groups will be developed in consultation with the advisory group (comprising service users, carers and clinicians).
The investigators will conduct separate focus groups for service users and clinicians as the investigators believe joint groups may impact the findings. The investigators will collate findings to produce recommendations for the criteria and language proposed for ICD-11. These recommendations will be discussed in feedback groups of service users, carers and clinicians, which will provide further participants an opportunity for additional thoughts and reflection.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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