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Dr. O'Leary discusses his critical perspective on Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) and argues that ODD is not a primary diagnosis but rather a risk syndrome, a set of symptoms (defiance, irritability, and vindictiveness) resulting from various underlying conditions like ADHD, anxiety, or trauma. He explains that conceptualizing ODD as a stand-alone disorder often leads to the risky treatment pathway of off-label antipsychotic medication, whereas recognizing it as a syndrome necessitates an etiology-focused approach to treat the true root cause, typically with safer, condition-specific interventions. Dr. O'Leary traces the evolution of ODD criteria through the DSM manuals and urges clinicians to use comprehensive evaluations rather than relying on simple screeners, especially when an ODD diagnosis is present.
Please leave feedback at https://www.psydactic.com or send any comments to [email protected].
References and readings (when available) are posted at the end of each episode transcript, located at psydactic.buzzsprout.com. All opinions expressed in this podcast are exclusively those of the person speaking and should not be confused with the opinions of anyone else. We reserve the right to be wrong. Nothing in this podcast should be treated as individual medical advice.
By T. Ryan O'Leary5
55 ratings
Dr. O'Leary discusses his critical perspective on Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) and argues that ODD is not a primary diagnosis but rather a risk syndrome, a set of symptoms (defiance, irritability, and vindictiveness) resulting from various underlying conditions like ADHD, anxiety, or trauma. He explains that conceptualizing ODD as a stand-alone disorder often leads to the risky treatment pathway of off-label antipsychotic medication, whereas recognizing it as a syndrome necessitates an etiology-focused approach to treat the true root cause, typically with safer, condition-specific interventions. Dr. O'Leary traces the evolution of ODD criteria through the DSM manuals and urges clinicians to use comprehensive evaluations rather than relying on simple screeners, especially when an ODD diagnosis is present.
Please leave feedback at https://www.psydactic.com or send any comments to [email protected].
References and readings (when available) are posted at the end of each episode transcript, located at psydactic.buzzsprout.com. All opinions expressed in this podcast are exclusively those of the person speaking and should not be confused with the opinions of anyone else. We reserve the right to be wrong. Nothing in this podcast should be treated as individual medical advice.

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