The ICD-10 Classification of Mental and Behavioural
Disorders
World Health Organization, Geneva, 1992
F91.3 Oppositional Defiant Disorder
This type of conduct disorder is characteristically seen in
children below the age of 9 or 10 years. It is defined by the presence
of markedly defiant, disobedient, provocative behaviour and by the
absence of more severe dissocial or aggressive acts that
violate the law or the rights of others. The disorder requires
that the overall criteria for F91 be met: even severely
mischievous or naughty behaviour is not in itself sufficient for
diagnosis. Many authorities consider that oppositional defiant
patterns of behaviour represent a less severe type of conduct
disorder, rather than a qualitatively distinct type. Research
evidence is lacking on whether the distinction is qualitative or
quantitative. However, findings suggest that, in so far as it is
distinctive, this is true mainly or only in younger children.
Caution should be employed in using this category, especially in
the case of older children. Clinically significant conduct
disorders in older children are usually accompanied by dissocial
or aggressive behaviour that go beyond defiance, disobedience, or
disruptiveness, although, not infrequently, they are preceded by
oppositional defiant disorders at an earlier age. The category is
included to reflect common diagnostic practice and to facilitate
the classification of disorders occurring in young children.
Diagnostic Guidelines
The essential feature of this disorder is a pattern of
persistently negativistic, hostile, defiant, provocative, and
disruptive behaviour,
which is clearly outside the normal range of behaviour for a
child of the same age in the same sociocultural context, and which
does not include the more serious violations of the rights of
others as reflected in the aggressive and dissocial behaviour
specified for categories F91.0 and F91.2. Children with this
disorder tend frequently and actively to defy adult requests or
rules and deliberately to annoy other people. Usually they tend to
be angry, resentful, and easily annoyed by other people whom they
blame for their own mistakes or difficulties. They generally have
a low frustration tolerance and readily lose their temper.
Typically, their defiance has a provocative quality, so that they
initiate confrontations and generally exhibit excessive levels of
rudeness, uncooperativeness, and resistance to authority.
Frequently, this behaviour is most evident in interactions with
adults or peers whom the child knows well, and signs of the
disorder may not be evident during a clinical interview.
The key distinction from other types of conduct disorder is the
absence of behaviour that violates the law and the basic rights of
others, such as theft, cruelty, bullying, assault, and
destructiveness. The definite presence of any of the above would
exclude the diagnosis. However, oppositional defiant behaviour, as
outlined in the paragraph above, is often found in other types of
conduct disorder. If another type (F91.0-F91.2) is present, it
should be coded in preference to oppositional defiant disorder.
Excludes:
* conduct disorders including overtly dissocial or aggressive
behaviour (F91.0-F91.2)
ICD-10 copyright © 1992 by World
Health Organization.
AZ Psychiatry copyright
© (www.azpsychiatry.info)
by Dr. Manaan Kar Ray
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