Rationale and Evidence
Terminology changes are informed by peer-reviewed psychiatric literature and expert clinical consensus within the project group, including consultation with relevant subject matter experts. Major international classification systems may be used for contextual alignment but are not treated as authoritative sources for content development. Sufficient evidence is defined as documented clinical expert consensus, supported where appropriate by peer-reviewed literature, established clinical usage, or alignment with recognised clinical guidance. The level of evidence required is applied proportionally to the scope and impact of the terminology change.
Rationale for change
Clear explanation of why the change is needed
Change type identified:
Editorial clarification
Clinical refinement
New concept or gap fill
Structural or modelling change
Clinical validation (required)
Reviewed and agreed by at least one psychiatrist or designated clinical expert
Confirmed as reflecting recognised clinical practice
Clinical intent and expected use are clear
Evidence recorded as: meeting notes, written comments, or review sign-off
Supporting evidence (one or more, as appropriate)
Peer-reviewed literature, standard psychiatric text or clinical guidelines supports the concept
Established clinical usage confirmed by expert experience or usage data
Alignment checked against the major classifications (for context only)
Note: Explicit citation of DSM or ICD is not required.
Proportionality check
Level of evidence is appropriate to the impact of the change:
Level 1 Minor wording change → expert agreement sufficient
Level 2 Clarification of meaning → expert agreement + light literature support
Level 3 New or contentious concept → expert agreement + literature support
Level 4 Structural change (hierarchy/model) → expert agreement + documented rationale
IP and governance considerations
No external classification is presented as a source of truth
Documentation language is neutral and classification-agnostic
Documentation completeness
Descriptions are clear, concise, and clinically meaningful
Synonyms reflect real-world usage
Any assumptions, exclusions, or boundaries are stated where relevant
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