Current terminology Sexual masochism disorder is the term employed by the current version of the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (
DSM-5) of the
American Psychiatric Association.
BDSM is a colloquial term relating to individuals who willingly engage in consenting forms of pain or humiliation, typically for sexual purposes. It is not a diagnosable condition in the DSM and ICD systems.
Previous terminology Sadomasochism appeared in the previous version of the
International Classification of Diseases (
ICD-10) of the
World Health Organization. It referred to the "preference for sexual activity that involves bondage or the infliction of pain or humiliation" (p. 172), and divided sadomasochism into "masochism" and "sadism" according to whether the individual prefers to be the recipient or provider of the pain or humiliation. The ICD-10 specified that mild forms of sadomasochism "are commonly used to enhance otherwise normal sexual activity" (p. 172) and that the diagnosis applies only if the behavior is preferred or required for sexual gratification. The condition was classified as one of the disorders of sexual preference, which include the paraphilias (p. 170).
Sexual masochism was the term employed in the DSM-III, DSM-IV, DSM-IV-TR. Each manual noted that the condition referred to real rather than simulated or fantasized pain or humiliation.
Masochism was the term employed by the DSM-II. In that manual, the condition was classified as a sexual deviation, which was used to describe "individuals whose sexual interests are directed primarily toward … coitus performed under bizarre circumstances" (p. 44). The term
paraphilia was not used in the DSM-II, and diagnoses did not have specific criteria until DSM-III. Although
sexual sadism was mentioned in DSM-I as one of the sexual deviations (p. 39), sexual masochism was not. ==Features==