Nail Biting Will Soon Abdicate Status as Annoying Bad Habit and Be Placed in Same Category as OCD
LatestNail biting is serious — even the Berenstain Bears knew so and they’re bears. Imaginary bears. It’s taken psychiatry almost 27 years to catch up with imaginary bears, but let us not quibble with the slow, ponderous locomotive that is modern medicine. Let’s instead learn all about how nail biters might be deeply disturbed.
NPR’s Amy Standen weaves a personal history of nail biting (full disclosure: I am a nail biter and have been ever since I got a stubborn hangnail in preschool when nail biting went from being a mere bad habit to a waltz with thousands of insidious pathogens) in with the latest clinical news: when the newest version of the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders drops early next year, it will show “pathological grooming” in the same category as obsessive compulsive disorder. Pathological grooming, explains Standen, an avowed 30-year nail biter, also includes behaviors like skin picking (dermatillomania) and hair pulling (trichotillomania) à la Charlize Theron in Young Adult. The new classification offers pathological groomers and psychiatrists a new way to think about and treat what were before widely dismissed as bad habits.
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
- 
        
        
            
 
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
        