Validity and Diagnosis
- For a mental illness diagnosis to be valid it must accurately reflect the patient’s symptoms, free from bias (clinical biases in diagnosis are covered in a separate revision note)
- A valid diagnosis is one which should classify and describe a genuine pattern of symptoms resulting from a real underlying cause
- A valid diagnosis will result in appropriate treatment being prescribed with the expectation of improvement and progress as a result of this treatment
- Due to the complex nature of mental illness the diagnostic process is not always straightforward e.g. is the patient’s low mood due to depression, anxiety, OCD or could it be part of a potentially more serious disorder such as schizophrenia?
- It is arguably more difficult for a clinician to diagnose a specific mental illness than it is for them to diagnose a physical illness e.g. Covid-19 is detectable by testing saliva; a broken bone shows up on an X-ray
Diagnosing mental illness is a complex process…
Examiner Tip
Remember that validity is another term for ‘truth’ which, when applied to psychological research, refers to the idea that the study should be measuring what it sets out to measure. For example, if I am researching depression and I ask my participants to tell me what their favourite food is I might find their answer interesting but it will not help me to measure depression because the question has nothing to do with depression. There are different types of validity but for the purposes of this topic it is best to focus on internal validity as meaning is this diagnosis a true reflection of the presenting symptoms? Could there be any other explanation for the symptoms?