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School refusal in Japan.

1992 
In Japan, school refusal began to attract the attention of psychiatrists from about 1960, and has been one of the main focuses of contemporary child and adolescent psychiatry because of the increase in the number of patients. It is now one of the most popular diagnosis in the clinical practice of child and adolescent psychiatry in this country. School refusal, however, is not listed as a diagnostic classification of a syndrome or disease in such international classifications of psychiatry as the ICD-9, ICD-10 draft, DSM-III, or DSM-III-R. It is an important task for child and adolescent psychiatry in Japan to determine the position of school refusal in relation to the international diagnostic standards. In this paper, (1) We described the actual conditions of school refusal in Japan. (2) We argued that it was reasonable and clinically useful to retain the concept of school refusal as a clinical entity unique to Japan.
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