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Clinical: Approaches · Group therapy · Techniques · Types of problem · Areas of specialism · Taxonomies · Therapeutic issues · Modes of delivery · Model translation project · Personal experiences ·
Diagnosis is the identification of the nature of anything, either by process of elimination or other analytical methods. Diagnosis is used in many different disciplines, with slightly different implementations on the application of logic and experience to determine the cause and effect relationships. Below are given as examples and tools used to identify the causes of symptoms and disorders, both physical and mental disorders.
In education
In medicine
- Autopsy
- Clinical judgement (not diagnosis)
- Computer assisted diagnosis
- Diagnosis related groups
- Differential diagnosis
- Dual diagnosis
- Medical diagnosis
- Psychodiagnosis
- Retrospective diagnosis
Methods used to contribute to a diagnosis
- Functional assessment
- Global clinical assessment tools such as the General health questionaire
- Geriatric assessment
- Intake interview
- Neuropsychological assessment
- Pain measurement
- Patient history
- Psychological assessment
- Psychiatric assessment
- Screening
- Symptom checklists
- Transdiagnostic theory
Logic
- Zebra (medical)
- Sutton's law
- Occam's razor
- Hickam's dictum
See also
- Bayesian probability
- Cognitive psychology of missed diagnosis
- Clinical psychology: Types of problem
- Comorbidity
- International Classification of Diseases
- Labelling
- Measurement
- Misdiagnois
- Organizational diagnostics
- Other approaches to defining what we do
- Prognosis
- Research diagnostic criteria
- Severity (disorders)
- Working towards a new classification in clinical psychology
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