Anyone else find terms used by mental health professionals offensive?

I was thinking about the labels given to those with mental health struggles. Previously I have been told I had an Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder, and am currently considered by the secondary mental health team to be on the spectrum with an Autism Spectrum Disorder, I have issues with the term Disorder. To me it implies that we are broken or wrong to think in the way we do. Given the diabolical state of the world at the moment, what is so great about being and thinking like a neurotypical person. 

More recently I have been reading up about the diagnostic assessment process, and the need for Informants. To me this language invokes overtones of criminality or worse of an oligarchic state and its secret police. I mentioned this to my wife and a couple of friends, and they too were horrified by the term Informant! 

Surely the Neurodivergent community deserves more respect. Derogatory language (disorder, informant) is in my opinion offensive and shows a lack of respect from those working in the mental health arena. The language used in any dialogue is, in my opinion, so important in establishing the tone and nature of any interaction.

I am interested in your views on the subject.

Parents
  • Just think of informant as a 3rd party who provides information. The word is probably neutral. If other regimes have used it otherwise, that is up to the other regimes.

    Disorder is an historical mental health term. Maybe it will be changed in the future, in DSM-6, but I doubt it as other genuine disorders are listed in the same manual. At least you are not put in an institution anymore.

    It could be named better, but I am not sure it is a battle that can be won in medical circles. In public it could be changed, but that is already the case; people don't call it a disorder.

Reply
  • Just think of informant as a 3rd party who provides information. The word is probably neutral. If other regimes have used it otherwise, that is up to the other regimes.

    Disorder is an historical mental health term. Maybe it will be changed in the future, in DSM-6, but I doubt it as other genuine disorders are listed in the same manual. At least you are not put in an institution anymore.

    It could be named better, but I am not sure it is a battle that can be won in medical circles. In public it could be changed, but that is already the case; people don't call it a disorder.

Children
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