
Plain English with Derek Thompson America in the Age of Diagnosis
271 snips
Sep 9, 2025 In this insightful discussion, neurologist Suzanne O’Sullivan, author of 'The Age of Diagnosis', challenges the current medical labeling trend. She argues that our obsession with diagnoses is pathologizing normal behaviors, turning healthy individuals into patients. O’Sullivan raises critical questions about the rise in ADHD, anxiety, and depression diagnoses, advocating for a balanced view of medical labels. She emphasizes the risks of overdiagnosis and unnecessary treatments while exploring how societal perceptions of health are evolving.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Autism Expansion Occurs At The Mild End
- Autism growth occurs mainly at the mild end of the spectrum rather than among severe cases.
- Diagnostic lines shift socially, not always by scientific discovery.
Why The Age Of Diagnosis Emerged
- The age of diagnosis arises from improved science, social demand for answers, and cultural perfectionism.
- These forces combine to push medicine toward finding and labeling milder problems.
Screening's Tradeoff: Harm Versus Rare Benefit
- Screening often finds slow or harmless cancers that lead to invasive tests and treatments.
- Lives saved by screening can be offset by many who undergo unnecessary harm.




