The "Clinician's illusion" and the epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment of depressive disorders
Authored by Scott B Patten
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1969-3
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Model Code URLs:
https://www-ncbi-nlm-nih-gov.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/pmc/articles/PMC6302305/bin/12888_2018_1969_MOESM2_ESM.nlogo
https://www-ncbi-nlm-nih-gov.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/pmc/articles/PMC6302305/bin/12888_2018_1969_MOESM6_ESM.nlogo
Abstract
BackgroundDepression often occurs in association with stressful events.
However, people with depressive disorders may experience episodes in
response to minor stressors or out of the blue. Similar episodes can
occur in people who do not have a disorder in response to severe events.
This plurality of symptom patterns, occurring as it does in the absence
of precise demarcation from normality has led to controversy over how
depressive disorders should be defined, how common they are, and when
treatment should be offered. Much of the controversy, however, may be
illusory, arising from a tendency to view depressive disorders as
defects or disease processes (the clincian's illusion). Avoiding the
illusion involves understanding depression as a defense rather than a
defect and requires consideration of aspects of signal detection theory
and the associated smoke detector principle. This perspective may help
to understand aspects of depressive disorders that are otherwise
puzzling and controversial.MethodsIn this paper, implications of signal
detection theory and the smoke detector principle are explored: (1)
conceptually, (2) using calculations performed in a spreadsheet and (3)
using an agent-based model. Depressive episodes are conceptualized or
represented as all-or-nothing phenomena activated in response to
stressful life events. These events occur in an environment that also
includes variable levels of baseline stress, creating a signal detection
problem. The agent-based framework allows interaction with the
environment as agents attempt to achieve an ideal level of
adaptation.ResultsThe smoke detector principle, if valid, may explain
otherwise puzzling and controversial features of the depressive
disorders, such as their lack of precise demarcation from normality, the
role of life events and stressors and their patterns of
prevalence.ConclusionsSignal detection concepts help to avoid the
clinician's illusion in which aspects of functioning of the body's
defenses are mistaken for a disease entity or defect. These principles
emphasize inevitable difficulties that are encountered in attempts to
conceptualize depressive disorders without reference to the environment
in which they occur, and without addressing possible stochastic
(randomly varying) elements. Because of the clinicians illusion, current
research priorities, as well as diagnosis and treatment strategies, may
be flawed.
Tags
models
mathematical models
Risk
Mortality
Natural-selection
Mood
Major depression
Rethinking
Simulation studies
Major depressive disorder
Depressive disorders