A reappraisal of Kendell and Jablensky's account of validity

Fellowes, Sam (2016) A reappraisal of Kendell and Jablensky's account of validity. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 22 (4). pp. 522-529. ISSN 1356-1294

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Abstract

Kendell and Jablensky argue that validity in psychiatry requires either unique biological characteristics or a zone of rarity, where few symptoms of one syndrome are present in another syndrome. Meeting either of these criteria allows the inference that the syndrome is caused by a specific biological mechanism not present in other syndromes. Failing to meet either of these criteria means the syndrome has been arbitrarily grouped and is invalid. Kendell and Jablensky's account of validity is too restrictive. Scientific phenomena are generally produced by a multiplicity of unstable overlapping causes, the causes for one phenomenon typically also present in other phenomena. Despite this, scientific phenomena are not automatically arbitrary. Science employs idealistic models that can successfully describe phenomena produced by overlapping causes and can gain approximately true knowledge of that phenomenon. The specific biological mechanisms that Kendell and Jablensky see as delivering validity are only specific in an idealized sense. Also, approximate truth means Kendell and Jablensky are mistaken to see validity as invariant and independent of context. An alternative approach to inferring causes is the common cause and unifications. Scientists often see otherwise unrelated phenomena regularly co-occur, and this legitimizes inferring common causes responsible for the phenomena. Applied to psychiatry, I show how syndromes that cover many different unrelated phenomena allow an inference to common causes, and this delivers validity. Zones of rarity can actually decrease validity. Idealized models often produce more information about causes by covering more phenomena, whereas zones of rarity often reduce the number of symptoms covered by a syndrome. Ignoring zones of rarity in favour of syndromes that cover many symptoms can sometimes increase validity. This can also occur when validating syndromes through corroborations with other factors. Increasing corroborations may require reducing the number of symptoms, potentially reducing validity.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2700/2719
Subjects:
?? CAUSATIONCOMMON CAUSEKENDELL AND JABLENSKYPHILOSOPHYVALIDITYZONE OF RARITYPUBLIC HEALTH, ENVIRONMENTAL AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTHHEALTH POLICY ??
ID Code:
80122
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
08 Aug 2016 09:56
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
19 Sep 2023 01:35