Abstract

The most basic distinction between depressive (and other mood) disorders and other major mental disorders is the notion that they are primarily mood or affective disorders and not fundamentally perturbations of other cognitive, perceptual, motor, communication, impulse, sleep−wake, fear-response, arousal, developmental or personality functions. The primacy of mood or affective state is captured in the ‘core’ criteria for major depression (depressed mood or loss of pleasure) and the other major mood disorders (e.g., for dysthymia – prolonged depressed mood) (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). For bipolar disorder, while the presence of manic features (with increased motor activity) (Scott et al., 2017) is the core element, the depressive phase is described in similar terms, with the emphasis on the same shared features of major depression (i.e., depressed mood or loss of pleasure).

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