Hypersexuality Disorder in Line to Become a Mental Diagnosis - East Idaho News

Hypersexuality Disorder in Line to Become a Mental Diagnosis

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ht candy cane nt 121015 wg?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1350392395219Courtesy Candy Cane(NEW YORK) — He goes by the online name Candy Cane, and his sexual urges have taken over his life, escalating exponentially each day.

Married and the father of five children, the 51-year-old spends more than six hours a day Internet video-chatting, taking photos of himself and seeking out male and female partners.

Candy, a retired combat medic who lives in the Southwest, said he has survived two military conflicts, but nothing has been as challenging as fighting his addiction to sex.

“I have become reckless and uncaring about losing anything,” said Candy, who was too embarrassed to use his real name.  “I care more about my sexual urges than my family right now.”

“I am losing control and I am going to end up with an STD or AIDS,” he said.

Candy exhibits all the symptoms of hypersexuality disorder, a proposed medical diagnosis that psychiatrists hope will be part of the DSM-5, the latest version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

Dr. Martin Kafka, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School who is the primary author of the revisions to the DSM, said proponents hope the DSM listing would open the door to more research that might help people like Candy.

“If you review the empirical research literature in the last 20 years from a variety of perspectives, it looks at the problem and calls it by different names, but all of these names have a lot in common when describing the same phenomenon,” said Kafka.

If approved, hypersexuality disorder will be defined as exhibiting repetitive, intense sexual fantasies, urges and behavior in association with the following criteria in adults:

  • excessive time consumed planning and engaging in sex — in response to a dysphoric mood state like anxiety, depression, boredom and irritability;
  • in response to stressful life events; and
  • unsuccessful efforts to control or reduce such urges, disregarding risk for physical or emotional harm to self or others.

The behavior must also cause “clinically significant distress or impairment” in a person’s daily personal or work life.

“If this problem gets to the point where you are being labeled as a philanderer or a scoundrel or a nasty narcissist, and it happens there is a label of hypersexuality disorder that does validly describe the nature of your behavior, one possibility is reframing the problem and getting medical treatment,” Kafka added.

But Dr. Allen Frances, professor emeritus of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Duke University in Durham, N.C., said the proposal is “a really stupid idea” that might lead those who misbehave to cry, ‘It’s not my fault.'”

“There may be some very small percentage of people who could qualify for addiction to sex, but if it ever became a diagnosis, it would be wildly misapplied,” he said.  “Addiction implies that you keep doing it when there is no more pleasure and it causes harm.  It becomes an excuse to misbehave.”

Frances, who worked on the DSM-4, argues that too many “normal behaviors” have been viewed as illness.

“Medicalizing this sort of misbehavior is reducing personal responsibility and acting like there is a medical solution,” he said.  “There is very little scientific evidence and the boundaries are fuzzy.”

Kafka admits that there is more clinical than scientific data on sexual hyperactivity, but including it as a disorder in the DSM-5 will open doors to that kind of research.

“By calling it an illness, you could be quite relieved that for something you have not really been able to control on your own, help is available,” he said.

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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