The point of testing the preliminary criteria in real-world environments was never to rubberstamp a specific outcome. Quite the contrary, we looked to the trials to provide crucial information on which diagnoses and definitions were most effective for and with clinicians—and which missed the mark. We selected disorders with high clinical and public health importance, disorders with major possible changes or newly proposed disorders, and we always expected issues to surface. Indeed, had they not, there would have been legitimate questions as to the quality of the field trials’ design and sensitivity.