Bipolar Disorder, Schizophrenia, Dissociative Identity Disorder: Which of these has the highest prevalence in DSM-5, and higher than it had in DSM-IV?
Most psychiatrists, psychologists, science reporters, and members of the general public would get this question wrong. There is a myth that dissociative identity disorder (multiple personality disorder) was a fad diagnosis—beginning with the publication of Sybil in 1970s and lasting through the 1990s—but that now it has gone back to being rare. That is a myth, as is seen if you compare the figures for prevalence given in the last two editions of the psychiatric diagnostic manual, DSM-IV (1994) and DSM-5 (2013).
The prevalence figures for how common these conditions are in the general public are as follows:
DSM-IV (1994)
Schizophrenia: 0.5%—1.0%
Bipolar Disorder: 0.4%—1.6%
Dissociative Identity: too controversial to give a figure
DSM-5 (2013)
Schizophrenia: 0.3%—0.7%
Bipolar Disorder: 0.6%
Dissociative Identity: 1.5% (1.6% in males; 1.4% in females)
The above figures are not cast in stone, since various studies have different results, depending on where the studies were done and the methods used. The above figures are a consensus of experts based on all available studies. So just note the magnitude and trends.
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