Diagnosing Mental Illness - How Are Mental Illnesses Diagnosed?
A mental health diagnosis involves many steps beginning with an evaluation by a doctor if symptoms of mental illness are present. The evaluation will begin with the doctor asking questions about your symptoms, medical history, and performing a physical exam. Although there are no laboratory tests to specifically diagnose mental illness, the doctor may use various tests to make sure something else isn't causing the symptoms. If no other illness is found, you may be referred to a psychiatrist or psychologist, mental health professionals who are specially trained to diagnose and treat mental illnesses.
Psychiatrists and psychologists use specially designed interview and assessment tools to evaluate a person for a mental illness. The doctor bases his or her diagnosis on the person's report of symptoms -- including any social or functional problems caused by the symptoms -- and his or her observation of the person's attitudes and behavior. The doctor then determines if the person's symptoms and degree of disability point to a diagnosis of a specific disorder.
The standard manual used by experts for the diagnosis of recognized mental illness in the U.S. is the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder (DSM), which is compiled by the American Psychiatric Association.
http://www.webmd.com/anxiety-panic/guide/mental-health-making-diagnosis
The foregoing begs some rather obvious questions, directed to the Governing Body:
You recently admitted publicly that you have no idea who all of the anointed are around the world, adding that you suspect many that claim to be are in fact "emotionally or mentally imbalanced." (w2011 8/15 p. 22, QFR)
Two broad areas of questions immediately come to mind:
1 - How did you determine that some are "emotionally or mentally imbalanced"? Which of you have the appropriate degree(s) in psychology to make such a determination? Where and when did you get these credentials? What is your clinical experience which qualifies you to make such an assessment? How many of those claiming to be of the anointed did you interview to make this assessment? How did you determine that this number was statistically relevant to make such a sweeping generalization concerning over 10,000 people making this claim worldwide? How did you do this since, as you admitted, you don't even know who these people are? Was this a double-blind, peer-reviewed study? How, if at all, was the validity of your conclusion confirmed independently?
2 - Since you admittedly do NOT know who the individuals are that comprise as a "composite body" the "Faithful and Discreet Slave" class, how can it be that they are involved in the providing of "spiritual food at the proper time"? And if they are NOT in fact actually involved, isn't it then a logical conclusion that there is no "FDS" class since by definition it is their involvement that proves who they are?
Similar questions could be raised concerning their labeling of apostates as "mentally diseased".
00DAD