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The three most widely used diagnostic systems in American psychiatry--the Feighner criteria, the Research Diagnostic Criteria, and DSM-III--appeared sequentially at 4-year intervals. The fact that the latter two systems each incorporated changes in essentially all diagnostic categories implied progress toward greater validity; however, this assumption has rarely been tested directly. To do this, the authors applied each of these three systems to 98 consecutively admitted patients with nonmanic psychoses. Although family history and 6-month follow-up data strongly supported the validity of diagnostic distinctions made in each of the three systems, they did not show increments in validity with successively developed criteria sets.
Coryell et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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