Olm the Water King
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I've already mentioned that they've removed the multiaxial system ( The Professional Counselor » The Removal of the Multiaxial System in the DSM-5: Implications and Practice Suggestions for Counselors ).
There have been other changes as well. I think the autism spectrum changes have also been talked about.
Then there are changes regarding substance problems:
https://www.thefix.com/content/DSM-V-new-definition-addiction-dependence-abuse8010
Now the problems:
https://www.thefix.com/content/addiction-definition-phony-epidemic-DSMV8765
Basically, there are 11 criteria for 'substance use disorder', 2 of which need to be met for a diagnosis. If 2 or 3 are present, the disorder is 'mild', if 4 or 5, it's 'moderate', anything more than that is 'severe'.
The problem...
P.S.: Note that according to that criteria, up to 40% (!) of all college students could easily be considered as having some kind of 'substance use disorder' at any time: DSM-5 Could Categorize 40% of College Students as Alcoholics | TIME.com
Also, I haven't gotten into the issue of "dependence" yet. It's interesting too. Luckily, they've gotten rid of that.
There have been other changes as well. I think the autism spectrum changes have also been talked about.
Then there are changes regarding substance problems:
https://www.thefix.com/content/DSM-V-new-definition-addiction-dependence-abuse8010
Scientists Unveil a Bold New Definition of Addiction
By Maia Szalavitz 02/09/12
The official diagnosis for addiction is getting a major makeover—promising major changes for the addiction community and healthcare professionals alike. Here's what you need to know.
To both "abuse" and "dependence," I say, “Good riddance.†Substance abuse—which was used to characterize drug problems that fall short of outright addiction, like college binge drinking—is a highly stigmatizing and misleading term. If “child abuse†means harming a child, does "drug abuse" mean harming a drug? It never made any sense linguistically and only served to associate drug users with abusive people in the public mind. Indeed, one randomized controlled trial showed that healthcare professionals who read vignettes about patients described as "substance abusers" supported more punishment and less therapy than those who read about the same patients identified as having "substance use disorders."
Even worse is “substance dependence.†The term was placed into a revision of the third edition of the DSM, DSM III-R, in the '80s as a euphemism for addiction with the intention of using a “medical sounding,†or nonstigmatizing, phrase...
Now the problems:
https://www.thefix.com/content/addiction-definition-phony-epidemic-DSMV8765
Basically, there are 11 criteria for 'substance use disorder', 2 of which need to be met for a diagnosis. If 2 or 3 are present, the disorder is 'mild', if 4 or 5, it's 'moderate', anything more than that is 'severe'.

The problem...
The problem, of course, is that those ideas will be set free into a world in which the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the American Society of Addiction Medicine and the millions of members of 12-step programs define addiction as a “chronic, relapsing disease.â€
All of these groups and, most importantly, the addiction treatment industry, tend to see everyone who takes a lot of drugs or drinks heavily at any point in time as having that disease. Some even diagnose any use of illegal drugs at all as addiction. This, not coincidentally, is in the economic interest of a quickly mushrooming rehab industry. In fact, in the '80s, major chains of rehabs and psychiatric hospitals had to pay out big settlements in lawsuits over admissions of people who did not have the diagnoses the programs claimed (some were children kidnapped and held till their insurance ran out).
...This push to adopt an addict identity happens even in adolescent treatment— despite the fact that most teens in treatment do not meet criteria for being addicted (some don’t even meet criteria for drug abuse!). Indeed, the vast majority are, not surprisingly, nondaily binge users of booze and pot. Nonetheless, at ever-younger ages, these kids are being pressured to view themselves primarily as addicts and alcoholics and to admit to having a chronic, lifelong illness with a 90% chance of relapse. Very little research has been done on the effects of this “treatmentâ€â€”but given what we know about the fluidity of adolescent identity, it certainly has the potential to do significant harm. For one, it can be a self-fulfilling prophecy...
P.S.: Note that according to that criteria, up to 40% (!) of all college students could easily be considered as having some kind of 'substance use disorder' at any time: DSM-5 Could Categorize 40% of College Students as Alcoholics | TIME.com
Also, I haven't gotten into the issue of "dependence" yet. It's interesting too. Luckily, they've gotten rid of that.