Ummmm...OK. I will repeat once more that this diagnosis is bogus. It may take a few years for position papers to catch up, but they will.
Folks were equally as adamant defending MPD as a dx and it has now been dropped and discredited. Those of us who are or were in the MH field knew that MPD was bogus for many years before the DSM revision caught up and position papers were revised. The same thing is happening with the bogus dx of RAD, only The Who doesn't know this because the extent of his education on the subject is a Google search.
The sentient point here is that there is no such thing as "Attachment Therapy" yet programs supported by people like The Who are actually practicing the dangerous and discredited methods that are together described as "AT."
In fact, the APA's position paper on RAD is that it exists as a dx, but there is no form of treatment to address it that is clinically sound or scientifically valid and that the "therapies" used by The Who's preferred facilities do not work and are dangerous or even deadly.
Here's the APA's position on AT:
http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/cont ... l/37/16/23Caution is the watchword for parents seeking evaluation and treatment for children with a rare psychiatric disorder that hinders a child’s ability to connect with adults.
Reactive attachment disorder (RAD) is a psychiatric condition affecting a small number of children and is widely misunderstood by the general public. In addition, unproven treatment strategies used in children who are suspected to have the disorder can be harmful and even fatal, according to an APA position statement released in July.
In response to a number of requests from psychiatrists to develop a policy on the disorder and provide the public with the most accurate information available, members of the APA Council on Children, Adolescents, and Their Families (now the Council on Child and Adolescent Psychiatry) worked in conjunction with the Committee on Preschool Children to craft the statement.
Term Misused
RAD is a complex disorder characterized by a child’s inability to form normal attachments to others, according to the statement, and a parent or physician may first notice problems in attachment to the caregiver in the latter part of the child’s first year.
"I think there is a lot of confusion in the public about the diagnosis of RAD, and the term is frequently misused," said David Fassler, M.D., an APA trustee-at-large and former chair of the Council on Children, Adolescents, and Their Families.
Fassler, who led the effort to create the position statement, added that council members "were also concerned over reports about the use of scientifically unproven and potentially dangerous approaches to treating what has been referred to as RAD."
The position statement warns both clinicians and caretakers of the dangers associated with so-called coercive holding therapies and "rebirthing" techniques that have sometimes been used to treat children with RAD.
In one recent case, such treatment proved fatal when uncredentialed therapists in a Colorado counseling center bound a 10-year-old girl in a sheet and sat on pillows placed around her head in an effort to simulate labor contractions. The goal? To let the girl be "reborn" into a world where past traumas would no longer exist for her. The girl died at a Denver hospital the day after the procedure.
Children with RAD may appear to be detached, unresponsive, inhibited, or reluctant to engage in age-appropriate social interactions. However, some children with RAD can be overly and inappropriately social, even with strangers. These problems may persist as the child grows older.
Many children with RAD have been physically, emotionally, or sexually abused, according to the policy statement, while others may have experienced long periods of isolation or neglect. In addition, some of these children have had "multiple or traumatic losses or changes in their primary caregiver."
Although there are no prevalence estimates available for the disorder, Fassler stressed that it is relatively rare and that not all children who have endured traumatic circumstances in early life will develop RAD. "The child’s temperament figures in his or her ability to cope with various stressful early life experiences," he said.
Interestingly, the specialty of The Who's programs is to use dx labels as "catch alls" to justify their programs. So these facilities improperly label kids as RAD so they can apply AT, often resulting in deadly consequences.
My point is that a kid can be diagnosed as RAD according to DSM criteria (which I believe will be dropped as a dx very soon, probably in the next revision), but anyone claiming to treat the alleged RAD is a charlatan because there is no treatment for it (precisely the reason why RAD will be dropped and replaced by a combination of proven quantifiable diagnoses).
But, hey, when someone is paid handsomely NOT to understand this, you'll have a hell of a time getting them to understand.
The important theme here is that parents should be avoid TBS/EG because there is not a shred of scientific evidence to suggest that they will help your child, but evidence is mounting that they will harm your child, especially if they claim to treat RAD.
Anyway, this argument over the validity of the RAD dx will play out over the next few years, but the preponderence of the evidence thusfar examined suggests RAD will disappear just like MPD. However, I will repeat, the most important point is that anyone claiming to treat RAD through AT is a quack and AT is the "treatment" that TBS/EG use and it is deadly.