Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)
entry by Julie M. Marx, Global Family Expert at Expat Valley
DSM is the standard abbreviation for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, published by the American Psychiatric Association: the primary clinical reference for the diagnosis of mental health conditions in North American and many international clinical and research contexts. The DSM is the reference framework within which clinical diagnoses relevant to the international living experience — including adjustment disorder, prolonged grief disorder, and major depressive disorder — are formally defined. Practitioners working with internationally mobile populations should be familiar with the DSM’s diagnostic categories while also being alert to its cultural assumptions and its tendency to pathologize experiences that are normal responses to extraordinary circumstances.
Comparable terms
ICD (International Classification of Diseases — the WHO equivalent; used in European and many non-North American clinical contexts; the parallel reference for international practitioners) · ICD-11 (the current WHO edition; includes Prolonged Grief Disorder as a recognized diagnosis, as does DSM-5-TR) · DSM-5-TR (the current edition — Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition, text revision, 2022) · PDM (Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual — an alternative framework; less widely used but more contextually sensitive)
Why this matters
The DSM shapes which experiences are labeled as disorders and which are not. For mobile, cross‑cultural clients, its categories may fit imperfectly or miss cultural nuance. Practitioners need to use it with cultural humility, not as a universal truth.
Cross-references
PTSD (Wellbeing & Mental Health); Expat Depression (Wellbeing & Mental Health); Ambiguous Loss (Wellbeing & Mental Health); Unresolved Grief (Wellbeing & Mental Health); Diagnostic Overshadowing (Neurodiversity & Medical Complexity Abroad); Cross-Cultural Assessment (Neurodiversity & Medical Complexity Abroad); EAP (Wellbeing & Mental Health). Diagnostic overshadowing describes one of the most consequential clinical biases that DSM-framework practitioners must guard against in internationally mobile populations — the tendency to attribute all presentations to known conditions or cultural context. Cross-cultural assessment documents the methodological challenges in applying DSM diagnostic instruments across cultural and linguistic backgrounds. EAP is the organizational support mechanism within which DSM diagnoses are most commonly first raised in internationally mobile employee populations.
Sources
American Psychiatric Association. (2022). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (5th ed., text revision). American Psychiatric Association Publishing. The primary reference for all clinical diagnoses cited in this vocabulary’s Wellbeing & Mental Health cluster.
The cultural limitations of the DSM framework are well-documented in cross-cultural psychology. For the most applicable critique in intercultural contexts, see: Kleinman, A. (1988). Rethinking Psychiatry: From Cultural Category to Personal Experience. Free Press. This entry is particularly important for practitioners working with non-Western internationally mobile clients for whom DSM categories may not be culturally appropriate or sufficient.
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