Gail will have an answer for this too. In rewriting the diagnostic guidelines, we tried very hard to use terminology congruent with that in the DSM-5. We call it the psychiatrist's bible. This is for psychiatrists to diagnose behavioural disorders. FASD has lots of other aspects to it as well. It's neurodevelopmental. There is actual brain damage associated with it. Psychiatry is one part of it and one member of the diagnostic team is a psychiatrist, but FASD is bigger than psychiatry. That's how I would answer that.
Gail may have another take on that from a clinical perspective.