Harvard Review of Psychiatry
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Distorting Posttraumatic Stress Disorder for Court
Ronald Schouten
To cite this article: Ronald Schouten (1994) Distorting Posttraumatic Stress Disorder for Court,
Harvard Review of Psychiatry, 2:3, 171-173
To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/10673229409017134
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Date: 14 December 2016, At: 05:52
Distorting Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
for Court
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Ronald Schouten, JD, MD
It is no secret that the true meaning of medical terms can be
distorted when they are put to use in the legal setting.
Informed attorneys eagerly adopt clinically useful ideas for
use in the legal arena as soon as they appear in the medical
literature. The result is often a twisting of the basic concept
that renders it of maximum benefit to the litigators, but
barely recognizable to clinicians.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) poses particular
problems in this regard. No other diagnosis has been so
warmly welcomed by plaintiffs’ attorneys or by clinicians
who would venture into the courtroom on behalf of their
patients. As a result, the concept and definition of PTSD
have been distorted to the detriment of those who suffer
from it, whether or not they are seeking redress in the
courts.
Since its inclusion in DSM-111, PTSD has attracted a
wide following. The initial criteria required that the traumatic event be a “. . . recognizable stressor that would evoke
significant symptoms of distress in almost everyone.”l Discussion in the text of DSM-I11 included the following:
concomitant physical component to the trauma which may
even involve direct damage to the central nervous system
(e.g., malnutrition, head trauma).
Thus, the criteria and the discussion call for a traumatic
episode more severe than the physical bumps and emotional
bruises encountered in everyday life.
The definition of the precipitating traumatic episode was
tightened in DSM-111-R,’ requiring:
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. . . an event that is outside the range of usual human
experience and that would be markedly distressing to almost anyone (e.g., serious threat to one’s life or physical
integrity; serious threat or harm to one’s children, spouse,
or other close relatives and friends; sudden destruction of
one’s home or community; or seeing another person who
has recently been, or is being, seriously injured or killed, as
the result of an accident or physical violence).
This definition of the stressor attempts to objectify the
requirement to a greater extent than does the DSM-I11
definition and continues to require a significant level of
trauma.
The DSM-IV3criteria are even more restrictive, requiring
that:
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The stressor producing this syndrome would evoke significant symptoms of distress in most people, and is generally
outside the range of such common experiences as simple
bereavement, chronic illness, business losses, or marital
conflict. . . . Stressors producing this disorder include natural disasters (floods, earthquakes), accidental man-made
disasters (car accidents with serious physical injury, airplane crashes, large fires), or deliberate man-made disasters
(bombing, torture, death camps). Some stressors frequently
produce the disorder (e.g., torture) and others produce it
only occasionally (e.g., car accidents). Frequently there is a
Reprint requests: Ronald Schouten, JD, MD, Law and Psychiatry
Service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Fruit St., Boston, MA
021 14.
HARVARD
REVPSYCHIATRY
1994;2:171-3.
Copyright 0 1994 by Harvard Medical School.
1067-3229/94/$3.00 + 0 3911157691
(1) The person has experienced, witnessed or been confronted with an event(s) that involved actual or threatened
death or injury or a threat to the physical integrity of
oneself or others. ( 2 ) The person’s response involved intense fear, helplessness or horror.
In essence, the new definition of stressor codifies the
explanation or the severity of the stressor contained in the
text of DSM-111-R. The Committee seems to be hammering
home the intent that PTSD be diagnosed only in connection
with a severe stressor. That intent has been present since
DSM-I11 but widely ignored by many.
PTSD has had an extended run as “flavor of the month”
for clinicians and attorneys. The attraction of PTSD to
attorneys is twofold. First, it is a disorder that is causally
linked to a certain event. Establishment of causation is an
essential element of a personal injury suit. Second, the
symptoms are well defined and common but not unique to
171
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Harvard Rev Psychiatry
September/October 1994
172 Schouten
PTSD. That is, they are presented in a checklist fashion,
found in a wide range of conditions, subjective, and readily
attributed to a specific event regardless of the true relationship to that event. The symptoms of PTSD are easily
feigned or at least subject to exaggeration.
The only barrier to indiscriminate application of PTSD as
a basis for emotional injury claims is the threshold stressor
criterion. As the following two examples demonstrate, mental health professionals who are willing to distort diagnostic
criteria have made this a barrier of little consequence.
CASE 1
Mr. A. is a 57-year-old man who worked for XYZ, Inc., for 18
years. XYZ is a community-based business with very strong
ties to the neighborhood. Mr. A. has a high school education
and started with the company as a clerk. Although his
technical skills are limited, his knowledge of the community
made him a valuable employee, and he was promoted to
assistant manager after 10 years. Three years ago, Mr. A.
was promoted to manager of one of X m ’ s branch offices, in
spite of limited experience and ability with personnel management. Shortly thereafter, XYZ was purchased by a larger
company. Mr. A. kept his job, but the new owners instituted
a policy of regular, written performance reviews, which XYZ
had previously disregarded. Mr. A.’s first performance review came at the end of a year in which he had had some
difficulties with his assistant manager, a young woman who
hoped to advance in the company and pressured Mr. A. to
accept her new ideas. In the performance review, Mr. A.’s
difficulties with personnel management were noted as an
area needing improvement, but he received a salary increase. Mr. A. was offended by receiving a less-than-perfect
evaluation, was convinced that the company was pushing
him out of the firm in favor of a younger employee, and left
the job claiming that he had been presumptively discharged.
He filed an age discrimination claim against the company
and alleged intentional and negligent infiiction of emotional
distress. Mr. A. began to visit a clinician at his attorney’s
suggestion shortly after he left his job. In support of his
emotional distress claim, Mr. A. offered the expert testimony of his treating clinician that he was suffering from
PTSD as a result of an invalid evaluation and age discrimination. The case was ultimately settled out of court for a
small amount.
CASE 2
Ms. B. is a 26-year-old woman who sued her employer for
sexual harassment, tortious interference with contract (maliciously interfering with her ability to get a job), and
infliction of emotional distress (both negligent and intentional). She alleged that the director of her division tried to
kiss her at a company party, attempted to pursue her
romantically, and fired her without cause when she rejected
his advances. Ms. B. had a highly successful academic career
and claimed to have had no failures at any point in her
professional life. She denied any history of sexual or other
abuse or neglect. Ms. B. sought out a clinician who agreed to
treat her and testify as an expert witness on her behalf. The
clinician diagnosed Ms. B. as suffering from PTSD, stating
that the accumulation of events at work-and not any
specific event-had caused her symptoms. The clinician
noted prominent symptoms of anxiety and depression and
arranged for her to receive buspirone for anxiety. She was
also seen in weekly psychotherapy. In court the clinician
testified that Ms. B.’s recent divorce, which followed her
18-month affair with another supervisor (whom she later
married), and the divorce of her parents in no way contributed to her stress. The jury found no credible evidence that
events occurred as Ms. B. had claimed and reached a verdict
for the defendants on all charges. Indeed, the judge specifically found the plaintiff to be delusional at the end of the
trial.
DISCUSSION
The above cases illustrate several points. First, neither of
these plaintiffs met the threshold criterion for PTSD under
DSM-III-R. A poor performance review, or even a job termination, does not meet the criterion for the stressor. A single
unwanted kiss, if it occurred, is unlikely to produce the
necessary level of stress, absent a history of sexual trauma
prior to the alleged incident. Second, the events alleged by
these plaintiffs to have occurred were clearly distressing and
could lead to symptoms of anxiety, depression, or both, as
well as recurrent intrusive thoughts, avoidance of stimuli
associated with the events, and even autonomic arousal.
Such symptoms can form the basis for an emotional distress
claim. A claim for emotional injury could be made without
invoking PTSD and would have been more credible in both
cases. Third, the clinicians were willing to mix the roles of
treater and expert witness and to distort the criteria to fit
the patients’ expressed legal needs. Fourth, while citing
DSM-III-R as their source of diagnostic criteria, both clinicians misapplied the diagnostic criteria, instead choosing a
definition that has grown in popularity: PTSD is any set of
psychological symptoms occurring after any upsetting
events, regardless of severity.
The actions of the clinicians/experts in these cases is
common and represents conscious and willful distortion of
an important diagnosis. Certainly, DSM criteria are not
written in stone and are open to dissent and modification.
Yet these clinicians tied their diagnoses directly to DSMIII-R. Is such loose application of clinical criteria the product of a desire to help the specific patient or even all trauma
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Harvard Rev Psychiatry
Schouten 173
Volume 2,Number 3
victims? Is it part of an effort to sensitize clinicians to the
plight of those who have suffered significant trauma? The
inaccurate application of diagnostic criteria may be the
result of poor training. On the other hand, it may be the
product of simple greed by those who strive to give attorneys what they want to hear. The clinician who is willing
and able to find a diagnosis to fit any injured patient or
criminal defendant will find a demand for such services
among some members of the legal community.
At least one court has confronted this specific problem.
In a case involving personal injury as a result of a contaminated water supply, the plaintiffs offered testimony that
they suffered PTSD as a result of drinking contaminated
water over an extended period of time. The court looked to
the DSM-I11 and rejected this claim, stating:
cations of such exclusion are open to speculation, but clinicians are more likely to interpret the criteria broadly. The
medical-legal implications are a bit more ominous. Individuals with a previously valid diagnosis of PTSD may have
trouble obtaining legal recourse because of the difficulty
encountered in demonstrating “intense fear, helplessness or
horror” in response to the traumatic event. Ironically, those
who sought to broaden the concept of PTSD in the clinic and
the courts may have provoked a backlash that excludes
those with previously valid claims.
Clinicians tend to fault the legal profession for the
misuse and distortion of clinical concepts. The fault lies not
with the lawyers but with those clinicians who would take
useful ideas and pervert them to other ends.
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Whereas consumption of contaminated water may be a n
unnerving occurrence, it does not rise to the level of the
type of psychologically traumatic event that is a universal
stressor. . . . The court must demand that a plaintiff produce sufficient authority that the particular event constitutes a “recognized stressor” or a psychologically traumatic
event which would produce significant symptoms of distress in almost everyone experiencing such an event.4
The adoption of a more restrictive stressor criterion for
PTSD in DSM-IV appears to be a response to the overuse
and distortion of PTSD in litigation. The end result may be
that individuals who have suffered significant trauma will
have a difficult time meeting the new criteria even though
they met the criteria under DSM-111-R. The clinical impli-
REFERENCES
1. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical
manual of mental disorders, 3rd ed. Washington, DC: American
Psychiatric Press, 1980.
2. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical
manual of mental disorders, 3rd ed, revised. Washington, DC:
American Psychiatric Press, 1987.
3. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and statistical
manual of mental disorders, 4th ed. Washington, DC: American
Psychiatric Press, 1994.
4. Sterling u Velsicol Chemical Corporation, 855 F2d 1188,1210
(6th Cir 1988).