Intellectual Disability (Intellectual Developmental Disorder)

J. Corey Williams, Na Young Ji, M.D.

DEFINITION

  • Intellectual disability (ID), or intellectual developmental disorder, is a disorder originating during the developmental period that is characterized by significant limitations in both:
    • Intellectual functioning (i.e. general mental capacity such as learning, reasoning, and problem solving) and
    • Adaptive behavior (i.e. conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills)
  • ID is classified under the Neurodevelopmental Disorders section of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition (DSM-5)[1].
    • DSM-5 does not use intelligence quotient (IQ) cutoffs for severity level of ID (mild, moderate, severe, profound), but rather impairments in conceptual, social, and practical domains.
      • For more information on how DSM-5 handles this cutoffs, please see the DSM-5 itself[1].
  • ID replaces the DSM-IV term "mental retardation" (MR)[2].
    • In this prior multiaxial system, the diagnosis of mental retardation was placed on Axis II.
    • IQ cutoffs for mental retardation in DSM-IV were: mild (IQ 50-55 to ~70), moderate (IQ 35-40 to 50-55), severe (IQ 20-25 to 35-40), and profound (IQ < 20-25).

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Last updated: September 3, 2017