The last issue that I saw was DSM IV (TR) and these were still classified as disorders. I should clarify that this stuff is used by Psychiatrist as diagnosis and Psychologist also use it, because of the medical model that it supposes. It is used for billing and record keeping. It is driven strongly by insurance companies as a structure and validity as to billing.They want specifics for their bucks and prefer medical models. The exhibitionist and the voyeur are generally something of a forensic tool where somebody has already been busted for something and is in the legal works.
I have been scouring the web. We are now at the DSM V, which you refer to. There is a DSM V (R) a revised issue dealing with the controversy from the changes from the DSM IV changes to DSM V. I see no reference to the DSM VI out as of yet (maybe in 2020). So, I managed to find a revised pdf of the changes as of October 2017 and found nothing on any elimination of the disorders.
I was in a board meeting of the sweat alliance (TFSA) last spring and mentioned something about exhibitionism as we were reviewing a future "Code of Conduct." My psych Ph.D candidate spoke up and quite authoritatively corrected that the latest version had eliminated these two. I was stunned and relieved. Relieved because, one, I don't like classifying and two it is way subjective and complex a subject to not get conflicting and erroneous diagnosis from different people. Putting Jbee's inner rebel aside, I find no evidence that my friend is correct. Ph.D's are not infallible. They are often full of it, but he is a very bright young man in the thick of his career development.
So, at this point I'm certainly okay with what you have presented. My friend has since moved to Rode Island to pursue his research and do an internship. I'm going to get on him, even though I would be surprised to find that he was not just plain wrong. I'm thinking that his phone #changed and certainly, he isn't using his U of A email anymore. But I know who has been in contact.
That disorder vs. exhibitionism is pretty much as clear as mud, especially after one reads the DSM. One works for court better and one acknowledges that it is mostly hooey unless someone is really messed up with this kind of behavior. This is what I was referring to above. There can be misdiagnosis, labeling, confusing a therapist, wrong impressions read into someones behavior. I think it is dangerous. Not smart enough?! These are people that make a living, get in teams and write this stuff and they are not "smart" enough! They are arguing constantly about how they see the same thing. Just let me tell you about their BS IQ tests!
The best that I have found on the net is nearly 2 years old. He told me this just a few months ago. I suspect that those two years haven't changed such a controversial subject. I believe that I repeated some misinformation. Glad that you most likely corrected it.
Jbee