
DSM-5 Alignment: Where the Mood Disorder Questionnaire Fits
Map mdq items to dsm5 bipolar criteria clarify gaps and explain why the tool remains a screener
Clinicians often ask how closely the MDQ mirrors DSM 5 bipolar criteria. Here is the quick alignment to keep in mind when reviewing results.
Symptom Overlap
The 13 MDQ items cover elevated mood, decreased need for sleep, pressured speech, racing thoughts, distractibility, increased goal directed activity, and risky behaviors—all core DSM 5 manic symptoms. The questionnaire mixes in items about irritability and spending sprees that map to the same diagnostic cluster.
What the MDQ Misses
It does not specify duration, which DSM 5 defines as at least one week for mania or four consecutive days for hypomania. The MDQ also does not parse mixed features or rapid cycling criteria, so clinicians must gather that data elsewhere.
Using the Impairment Question
DSM 5 requires marked impairment, hospitalization, or psychosis for mania. The MDQ’s final question approximates that by asking patients whether symptoms caused moderate or serious problems. Use it as a clue, then verify with detailed history.
Practical Takeaway
Treat the MDQ as a screening doorway. Once the score suggests bipolar spectrum involvement, shift into a DSM 5 based interview to confirm episode length, rule out substance effects, and document specifiers. That two step approach satisfies both clinical rigor and workflow efficiency.
Trusted Bipolar & MDQ Resources
- American Psychiatric Association bipolar overview - Outlines DSM-5 criteria, specifiers, and care pathways from the APA.
- Mood Disorder Questionnaire PDF (SAMHSA) - Download the original worksheet behavioral health teams rely on for MDQ screening.
- Centre for Addiction and Mental Health bipolar guide - Canadian clinical resource describing early warning signs and stabilization tips.
- Mayo Clinic bipolar diagnosis overview - Walks through the clinical interview, lab work, and differential diagnosis process.
Author
Sarah Chen is a mental health researcher and content strategist focused on Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) education, bipolar screening workflows, and evidence-informed follow up care. As the lead writer for MDQTest resources, she translates clinical research into actionable guides that help clinics operationalize the MDQ across telehealth, primary care, and bilingual settings—without providing licensed clinical services.
Expertise
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