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I'm curious as to how many of you believe in true DID (formerly known as MPD)? What kind of patient experiences have you had with this?
I'll be blunt. I don't believe it.
I've never seen a supposed DID who didn't have more "switching" when rewarded for it and less "switching" when rewards (attn, desired meds, special treatment, etc) were withheld. I've watched the amount of "switching" reduced in a matter of minutes when salient rewards were withheld and others provided for behavior that is less dramatic. But that's only my experience in Psych Emergency Service, Inpt wards, and Crisis Outreach. I have to admit I've never attempted long-term outpt treatment for such a disorder. I'm a PES guy - so my view is pretty narrowed to that end.
IMHO, it's always an extreme example of Cluster B Personality Disorders.
Are you saying that reward responsiveness is reason enough to consider DID invalid?
Are you saying that reward responsiveness is reason enough to consider DID invalid?
That's even after meeting a guy who seems to be mostly trying to compose his career out of DID.
When 301 board-certified U.S. psychiatrists were surveyed in 1999 about their attitudes toward DSM-IV dissociative disorders diagnoses:
35% had no reservations about DID
43% were skeptical
15% indicated the diagnosis should not be included in the DSM.1
Only 21% believed there was strong evidence for DID's scientific validity. On balance, published papers appear skeptical about DID's core components: dissociative amnesia and recovered-memory therapy.2
Bottom line, even if DID exists, you still hold a person responsible for their actions.
Regardless, Whopper is 100% correct when he says: "Bottom line, even if DID exists, you still hold a person responsible for their actions."
*must...resist...philosophical argument...about...free will...*
Whether you will or won't resist has already been determined.
"Resistance is futile."
The guy trying to base his career on DID is a psychiatrist with a large trauma practice who diagnoses as many of those patients as possible with DID. After spending time with those patients, I'm not convinced. Interestingly enough, several of those patients deny the diagnosis while acknowledging that they continue to see him b/c they think he is a good psychiatrist, even though neither they nor their families think they have DID.
The guy trying to base his career on DID is a psychiatrist with a large trauma practice who diagnoses as many of those patients as possible with DID. After spending time with those patients, I'm not convinced. Interestingly enough, several of those patients deny the diagnosis while acknowledging that they continue to see him b/c they think he is a good psychiatrist, even though neither they nor their families think they have DID.
I knew you were going to say that.
I have had one true DID patient. Solid dissociations with flashback, no memories of it, changes in voice etc to a younger version of herself.
She refused to believe it and asked me to audiotape it. I was worried about it, and we talked about risks etc., but finally did it. It completely freaked her out and actually set her back quite a bit. Ended up with several parts of her, several just being young versions who took and remembered the abuse (seemed to be their only purpose, no real intellect there), and then went away so the "original" could live more normal (or less abnormal. Terrible PTSD anyway). Eventually a kind of caretaker emerged and basically got rid of the original personality. Rather freakish, almost as if the original had been killed off, not just a change. She didn't get to be a whole lot better after that, not functioning very well outside of very strictly defined work scenarios.
I have had several others with severe dissociations and huge memory gaps and blocks, but nothing as dramatic.
> A research idea I had is if someone is able to accumulate a decent number of DID patients, to put them under an f-MRI to see if they are telling the truth in their questions. That way, it'd allow us to determine if the person truly has DID...
So you think the issue of the 'reality' of DID comes down to whether the patients are telling the truth or lying? Do you think that the existence of attention deficit, gender identity disorder, female sexual dysfunction, homosexuality etc etc etc is to be settled the same way?
If we are clear on what a self or personality is (according to current theories everybody is fragmented to a greater or lesser degree with different aspects coming to the fore in different contexts) then the notion that some people can be more fragmented than others really isn't terribly surprising, fascinating, or mystical.
How many souls per body get to go to heaven I wonder???![]()
What Whopper is saying, I think, is that doing a fMRI study may help us distinguish malingerers from the rest.
So you think the issue of the 'reality' of DID comes down to whether the patients are telling the truth or lying? Do you think that the existence of attention deficit, gender identity disorder, female sexual dysfunction, homosexuality etc etc etc is to be settled the same way?
Most people who have DID don't accept or believe it to begin with. It is typically something you as behavioral health specialist pick out of the patient's function and symptoms....So if you have a person claiming to have DID, after a structured interview while conducting an f-MRI, one could test to see if the person has it for real.
You mean non-epileptic seizures? "pseudo" indicates willful deception, and these patients get blamed and vilified. I encourage all to avoid the term "pseudo seizures." Certainly, adrenaline surges and stress can cause movement problems.Such a test may be the only way to settle the debate once and for all, and it may also be a way to test other phenomenon such as pseudoseizures. One side believes it may be completely intentional, the other believes it may be a form of conversion disorder, where the person's seizure-like jerking movements are done unconsciously.
And these providers probably won't be able to provide effective treatment....An fMRI test with a structure interview would have to contain several questions that could a model of study. For example, if the person was interviewed while presenting as an alter, assuming the fMRI truly is extremely accurate (which it may not be, more work needs to be done on this), then the researcher could at least propose that there's now evidence that this alter is not an act, it could be a real and genuine thing. The problem with DID is several who do not believe it exists think so because they think the alters are an act for whatever reason--attention, malingering, factitious disorder, etc.
Most people who have DID don't accept or believe it to begin with. It is typically something you as behavioral health specialist pick out of the patient's function and symptoms.
You mean non-epileptic seizures? "pseudo" indicates willful deception, and these patients get blamed and vilified. I encourage all to avoid the term "pseudo seizures." Certainly, adrenaline surges and stress can cause movement problems.
To approach patients as liars rather than people who need help with controlling their own life is counter-productive.
And these providers probably won't be able to provide effective treatment.
If you think your patient is lying, you spend to much time trying to catch them in a lie. And so, if you do, then what? You challenge them, they get upset and leave, and then you got nothing, and they got no treatment.
Yet some patients do think they have it, but don't have it (based on expert opinion and data). Some believe they have it, and specialist agrees. Some do not believe they have it, but specialist thinks otherwise. Some don't think they have it, and nor does the specialist. Wouldn't it be wise to tell them apart?Most people who have DID don't accept or believe it to begin with. It is typically something you as behavioral health specialist pick out of the patient's function and symptoms.
You mean non-epileptic seizures? "pseudo" indicates willful deception, and these patients get blamed and vilified. I encourage all to avoid the term "pseudo seizures." Certainly, adrenaline surges and stress can cause movement problems.
I agree but some healthy skepticism is in order. Often enough patients are either actively lying (specially when it comes to sensitive issues) or are simply unaware of why they acted in a particular way. So questioning their data/story is reasonable. Again, the intention is not to blame but to understand them better.To approach patients as liars rather than people who need help with controlling their own life is counter-productive.
And these providers probably won't be able to provide effective treatment.
If you think your patient is lying, you spend to much time trying to catch them in a lie. And so, if you do, then what? You challenge them, they get upset and leave, and then you got nothing, and they got no treatment.
To approach patients as liars rather than people who need help with controlling their own life is counter-productive.
And these providers probably won't be able to provide effective treatment.
If you think your patient is lying, you spend to much time trying to catch them in a lie. And so, if you do, then what? You challenge them, they get upset and leave, and then you got nothing, and they got no treatment.
Reality is that when patients get that diagnosis, esp. in inpatient settings, all "less-informed," from nurses on down starts accusing the patient of faking. That WE know what it means doesn't help the patient.I would agree that the word pseudo has bad connotations, but it also indicates a separation from what could be considered normal or legitimate. Pseudoseizures or pseudohallucinations have different causes and thus different treatments, and should indicate as such. The name I do not believe confers blame, but the blame comes from the bias inherent towards much of mental illness, with the inaccurate myth that will power alone could change the situation.
And yet, that is exactly what happens.....I do not believe that's what "pseudo" means. It is not "willful deception" as it is not deliberate feigning but beyond patient's conscious awareness. And blaming and vilifying patients for that is uncalled for. There is not justification for it.
And how much are we willing to let patients suffer for what is "correct"? I do have significant concerns about this, as I have quite a few times seen stigma hurt patients.Regarding the bad connotations of pseudoseizures, fair enough. There is debate as to whether these are willful deception or a form of conversion disorder. The term some are trying to replace it with is a Nonepileptic psychogenic seizure.
That, however, too could be unfair. Why? Well first, it's not a seizure. There are several who are convinced that it is not a form of conversion disorder, and therefore may be completely fabricated on the part of the patient. Of course, it might not be, but the point is this has not been proved either way.
And how much are we willing to let patients suffer for what is "correct"? I do have significant concerns about this, as I have quite a few times seen stigma hurt patients.
Fortunately, I am in an all-are-welcome outpatient sliding-scale clinic, but I know that I get people who exaggerate symptoms and whatnot. As for reports, I will present my findings and impressions as I see them, including incongruence of symptoms and symptoms of the patient being over-eager to report symptoms and so on.....A question for you. Would you write a letter recommending disability to a judge in 100% of patients that requested it of you given the knowledge that in a forensic setting 30%+ of patients by studies are malingering (disability would be included in that setting)? If you actually investigated the issue with something such as a physical and mental status exam to see if the person truly meets a definition of disability, or are you spending too much time on that issue?
... I've come to a point where if I do suspect someone as malingering, my level of animus is nowhere to the degree where it was in residency. If I suspect it, my thinking mode is now to dig deeper to find out what's really going on, for the purpose of determing either the best way to help the person, or to find the truth as the Court wants me to do. If I'm the treating physician, it's the former, if I'm doing a forensic evaluation and I have no treatment relationship, then it's the latter. If I'm treating the person, and I believe the person is malingering, I then start to try to figure out why. The reason why may indicate the person needs some type of help I can provide. (Someone malingering for suboxone may be doing so because his brother actually needs it). Of course it could be the person's intentions aren't so selfless. Malingering IMHO is not enough to jump the gun and label a person and then go on the offensive against them.....
As I'd mentioned in another thread, there is a lot of what is technically malingering that goes on simply because the individual doesn't know any better way to cope with what's going on in their life. But really--is it really such a great gig to know how to get yourself admitted to a psych ward to get what you think you need? It actually indicates quite a desperate level of need on their part, IMHO.