Reference
Guide | Reference

16  Purpose, Scope, and Limits

This chapter orients you to what the framework is for and where it stops. Most useful when setting scope with yourself or others.

Purpose. Provide a DSM-compatible clinical reasoning companion for assessment, formulation, and documentation. Use patient-near phenomenology and dimensional ratings to reduce diagnostic noise.

16.1 Scope

  • In: presenting experiences, domains, prototypes, specifiers, life-stage adaptations, rule-out compendium, measurement prompts, documentation templates.
  • Out: treatment guidelines, legal standards, billing policy, or definitive etiologic models.

Intended Audience. Clinicians in psychiatry, psychology, primary care, and integrated care; Trainees and supervisors who need a consistent documentation and teaching frame; Systems focused on quality, measurement-based care, and continuity.

Compatibility and Outputs. Compatible with DSM and ICD codes; codes are outputs, not the entry point; Outputs: domain ratings, prototype tags, specifiers, formulation summary, risk and trajectory notes, and a documentation snippet.

ImportantGuardrails
  • Not a replacement for DSM or ICD.
  • Not a substitute for clinical judgment, local policy, or legal requirements.
  • Not a treatment manual or prescribing guide.
  • Not a definitive model of cause or mechanism.

16.2 Safety and Ethics Commitments

  • Record uncertainty and competing explanations when present.
  • Prefer least-harmful labeling and avoid stigmatizing language.
  • Center context, development, and culture in formulation.