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Published Online: 1 August 2000

Classifying Depression: Should Paradigms Lost Be Regained?

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Classification of the depressive disorders has long been controversial. The dominant current model is unitarian, with disorders largely distinguished on the basis of severity. Both the unitarian and the contrasting binarian views (of two principal types) have proved to be unsatisfactory. The binarian model’s procrustean requirements are too inflexible to address the evident heterogeneity contributed to by clinical manifestations and underlying personality features. METHOD: This article briefly reviews the historically favored unitarian and binarian viewpoints on classification of depression. RESULTS: The author argues that the “final common pathway” model, articulated in the early 1970s, helped to cement psychiatric classification in subsequent DSM and ICD revisions into a unitarian framework, leading to a relatively sterile period of depression research. Clinically described depressive typologies were obscured rather than refined by appropriate modeling paradigms. A contrasting, empirically based hierarchical model, driven by disorder-specific clinical manifestations such as psychotic features and observable psychomotor disturbance, is proposed as a paradigm for distinguishing psychotic, melancholic, and nonmelancholic classes of depression, while a spectrum model is favored for distinguishing the principal nonmelancholic subclasses. CONCLUSIONS: Resolution of the better paradigm requires that the two models undergo comparative testing in applied studies, particularly ones pursuing neurobiological determinants and differential responses to antidepressant treatments.

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Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 1195 - 1203
PubMed: 10910777

History

Published online: 1 August 2000
Published in print: August 2000

Authors

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Gordon Parker, M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc., F.R.A.N.Z.C.P.

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