Thank you for presenting your perspective. It is reassuring to see that a mental health professional is not content with the status quo.
I have nothing substantive to offer, given that I am only an aircraft technician, but if I might humbly and solemnly proffer some 'emanations from the heart',...
I'm more familiar with the DSM III than IV, but seemingly...I don't know....much is left unpresented and unexplained.
I am viewing this from the perspective of a woman who has been 'burned' repeatedly by members of the profession and accordingly, possesses a very jaundiced view of the same.
The document....lacks....and some treat it like an icon and as an immutable, reliable standard of measurement....
I do not at all have your expertise and training and it is not my intention to be presumptive; be not offended by anything which I say.
It seems for some to be a 'tool of convenience and expedience' for 'pigeon-holing' suffering human beings quickly, when the desire to actually effectively and compassionately treat them is undesired or distasteful somehow...
"Just look it up in The Book, categorize them and dispose of them."
I've witnessed and been a victim of that mindset on numerous occasions in the past.
It strikes me as small-minded and heartless. Some pathologies I know, are rather glaringly obvious and really require no great labor in generating an accurate diagnosis. You know what the sufferer is afflicted with and how to properly treat them and in that situation, expediency is appropriate.
But as I mentioned in another thread, some things ostensibly seem 'clear and cut' but in actuality, they are far from being obvious and simple.
It strikes me as dangerous to over-simplify something as staggeringly complex and interrelated as human behavioral manifestations, etiologies and co-morbidities.
That seems especially so for US. TS does so much damage and creates many 'spin-off' and secondary co-morbidities - and these may add to co-morbid conditions which have nothing to do with TS, be they organic or cognitive and complicate the treatment process considerably.
Transition and HRT initiated a massive cascade of concomitant healing and maturational processes; accordingly, a number of major co-morbid conditions rectified themselves without ancillary or independent treatment.
But some [great anger] clearly have not and must be addressed as 'separate entities' seemingly, from a laywoman's imperfect perspective.
I am not discouraging expediency nor efficiency in treatment of mental health issues, but I am gently and humbly saying that human behavior is often far more complex and interrelated than some would like and be content in believing.