
The Michael Shermer Show Mental Health: More Diagnoses, Fewer Answers?
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Jan 10, 2026 Sami Timimi, a child and adolescent psychiatrist and author of *Searching for Normal*, delves into the complexities of modern mental health diagnostics. He questions why increased access to treatment hasn't improved outcomes and discusses how expanding diagnostic categories like ADHD and autism may blur the lines between distress and normalcy. Timimi cautions against the framing of mental illness as purely biological, warns that this can increase stigma, and emphasizes the importance of social connections and resilience over rigid diagnoses.
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Subjective Diagnoses Expand Without Anchors
- Psychiatric diagnoses lack empirical anchors and are subjective constructs that expand over time.
- This enables categories like ADHD to broaden without biological proof, inflating prevalence rates.
The Treatment–Prevention Paradox
- The treatment–prevention paradox: more access and diagnoses haven't reduced population prevalence.
- Increasing services without rethinking underlying models can worsen outcomes.
How Criteria Drift Broadens Categories
- Defining mental disorders by subjective functioning invites horizontal and vertical expansion of categories.
- Without measurable markers, criteria shift to include milder or different populations.











