Factitious Disorder
This planned video covers what factitious disorder is, what the signs and symptoms of factitious disorder are, what causes factitious disorder, how factitious disorder is diagnosed and how factitious disorder is treated.
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My notes:
Hello everybody. Welcome to Mariah’s Sanctuary. I’m Mariah.
Today’s suggested topic is Factitious Disorder.
This video is a research video.
For the research in this video, I used an article to gather information for this topic. The link to this article will be posted in the comment section.
I would really appreciate any support that you can make towards my disability YouTube channel through the forms of a donation, becoming a monthly supporter, or art sales (All of these can be done on my Patreon account or my Ko-fi account). The links to these accounts will be posted in the comment section. Thanks a lot.
Now, let’s get into today’s topic.
The information below came from the Defeating Epilepsy website in the article Factitious Disorder.
What is factitious disorder?
Factitious disorder, commonly known as Munchausen syndrome, is a mental disorder in which a person purposefully feigns or exaggerates an illness without clear external motivation to do so. This behavior is motivated by a psychological need to assume the role of a sick person. By perpetuating this “sick” persona, patients risk not receiving an appropriate diagnosis or effective treatment.
Symptoms and causes
People with factitious disorder engage in various forms of deception, going as far as to cause physical harm to themselves to maintain their ruse. Even when evidence points to fabricated or self-inflicted symptoms, these individuals continue to pretend to have some form of illness. Factitious disorder imposed on another (Munchausen syndrome by proxy), in which a person falsely claims or induces symptoms to someone in their care, typically a child or an elderly dependent, is a related condition.
Signs of factitious disorder may include:
• Vague, dramatic and inconsistent symptoms
• Unexplainable worsening of the condition
• Failure to respond to treatment
• Evidence of numerous surgical procedures
• Seeking treatment from different professionals and hospitals, maybe even under an alias
• Extensive knowledge of medical conditions and terminology
People with this disorder often refuse psychiatric treatment; therefore, the cause of the condition remains unclear. Researchers believe that psychological factors, such as childhood neglect, emotional trauma, or a history of hospitalization, may contribute to the development of factitious disorder. Others propose that a potential link to personality disorders may play a role in enabling this condition.
Factitious seizures
Factitious seizures are non-epileptic convulsions over which a patient has conscious control. Unlike the nonepileptic seizures observed in conversion disorder, which are psychogenic by nature, these seizures are intentionally caused by the patients. Factitious paroxysmal (pronounced peh-ruhk-siz-muhl) episodes may be more difficult to differentiate from epilepsy than psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) are. This raises the risk of a misdiagnosis, which results in the administration of inappropriate treatment, higher mortality risk, and excessive medical expenses.
Diagnosis and Treatment
Due to the patient’s dishonesty, gathering information on previous medical records may be difficult. Given that the symptoms reported by patients are often false or widely exaggerated, physicians must rely on other signs that could lead them to a factitious syndrome diagnosis.
These include:
• Ambiguous medical history
• Unusual illness trajectory
• Symptoms inconsistent with lab test results
• Patient’s reluctance to reach out to previous medical professionals or family members for information
Since people with this syndrome are often unwilling to admit that they need help, experts recommend adopting a non-judgmental approach to suggesting a consultation with a mental health professional. Psychotherapeutic interventions such as cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) may help address underlying psychiatric conditions such as depression. Severe cases of factitious disorder may warrant hospitalization in a mental health facility in hopes that a psychiatric hold prevents patients from undertaking invasive and dangerous interventions on themselves.
Conclusion
Factitious disorder is a mental health condition characterized by a deliberate exaggeration or feigning of physical or psychological symptoms to assume the sick role, often without obvious external incentives. Because the clinical features of the condition do not match the ones reported or exhibited by patients, it is difficult to diagnose and manage this disorder.
I hope that this video helps someone.
• As some of you may know, I have problems with pronunciation which is because I’m dyslexic, autistic, and an ADHDer. I don’t try to hide this because I want people who have similar struggles to know that they are not alone. No matter how hard pronouncing some words can be, I will always try my best.
Those are the reasons why I keep my mistakes in these videos.
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I WOULD REALLY APPRECIATE ANY SUPPORT THAT YOU MAKE TOWARDS MY DISABILITY YOUTUBE CHANNEL THROUGH THESE FORMS:
1. DONATIONS (through my Patreon account or my Ko-fi account)
2. BECOMING A MONTHLY SUPPORTER ( through my Patreon account or my Ko-fi account)
3. ART SALES (through my Patreon account or my Ko-fi account)
Here are the links to both accounts previously mentioned:
1. Patreon- https://www.patreon.com/mariahburley
2. Ko-fi- ko-fi.com/mariahburley
The article that I used for information on this topic: https://www.defeatingepilepsy.org/understanding-epilepsy/factitious-disorder/
Thank you for today’s planned video Mariah!