Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering PDF
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UAG School of Medicine
Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan
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This chapter presents an overview of factitious disorders and malingering. It discusses the different types of factitious disorders, including those imposed on oneself or another, as well as the symptoms, psychology, and treatment of these conditions.
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Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC Access Provided by: Current Diagnosis & Treatment: Psychiatry, 3e Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan...
Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC Access Provided by: Current Diagnosis & Treatment: Psychiatry, 3e Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan INTRODUCTION The diagnostic criteria for Factitious Disorders now appear and are classified under Somatic Symptom and other Related Disorders in DSM5 Factitious Disorder Imposed on Self: Falsification of physical or psychological signs or symptoms, or induction of injury or disease, associated with identified deception. The individual presents himself or herself to others as ill, impaired, or injured. The deceptive behavior is evident even in the absence of obvious external rewards. The behavior is not better explained by another mental disorder, such as delusional disorder or another psychotic disorder. Specifiers include: Single episode and Recurrent episodes (DSM5). FACTITIOUS DISORDERS Factitious disorders are consciously determined surreptitious simulations or productions of diseases. Factitious disorder imposed on self is relatively uncommon, but when present it consumes large amounts of professional time and medical costs. The Factitious disorder imposed on another is a particularly malignant form of child abuse that physicians must identify and manage in order to save the health or lives of children. (DSM5 does not list the following four diagnostic subtypes of factitious disorder however as they are subsumed under the general Factitious Disorder heading It is important to discuss the differing classes of patients who present with Factitious disorder. 1. Some patients with factitious disorder present with predominantly psychological signs & symptoms Patients with factitious disorders may simulate psychological conditions and psychiatric disorders. For example, a patient may feign bereavement by reporting that someone to whom he or she was close has died or been killed in an accident. Patients may simulate symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder or provide false reports of previous trauma (e.g., a civilian accident or combat experience). Closely related to factitious posttraumatic stress disorder is the false victimization syndrome, in which the patient falsely claims some type of abuse. For example, a woman may falsely report that she had been raped. Other simulated psychological disorders include various forms of dementia, amnesia, or fugue; multiple personality disorder; and, more rarely, schizophrenia. 2. Patients sometime present with predominantly physical signs & symptoms The production of physical symptoms or disease is probably the most common form of factitious disorder. Essentially all medical diseases and symptoms have been either simulated or artificially produced at one time or another. Among the most common of these disorders are factitious hypoglycemia, factitious anemia, factitious gastrointestinal bleeding, pseudoseizures, simulation of brain tumors, simulation of renal colic, and more recently, simulation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).There are a group of patients with Factitious Disorder who present with Combined Psychological & Physical Signs & Symptoms. A patient may be admitted to the hospital with factitious physical symptoms and, in the course of hospitalization, perhaps in an attempt to obtain more sympathy or interest, may report or simulate a variety of psychological symptoms such as having experienced the recent loss of a close relative or friend or having been raped in the past. General Considerations Factitious illnesses have been known since the Roman era and were described in Galen's textbook of medicine. Modern interest in this surreptitious production of symptoms presented to physicians was spurred by Asher's 1951 description and naming of "the Munchausen syndrome"; subsequently more than 2000 Downloaded articles in 11:17 20241028 professional A Yourjournals IP is have described, and tried to explain, this perverse form of illness behavior. Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 1 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility A. Epidemiology The true incidence of factitious illness behavior is unknown, but it is probably more common than is recognized. One Canadian study estimated that friend or having been raped in the past. Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC Access Provided by: General Considerations Factitious illnesses have been known since the Roman era and were described in Galen's textbook of medicine. Modern interest in this surreptitious production of symptoms presented to physicians was spurred by Asher's 1951 description and naming of "the Munchausen syndrome"; subsequently more than 2000 articles in professional journals have described, and tried to explain, this perverse form of illness behavior. A. Epidemiology The true incidence of factitious illness behavior is unknown, but it is probably more common than is recognized. One Canadian study estimated that approximately 1 in 1000 hospital admissions is for factitious disease. However, another investigation of an entirely different type determined that approximately 3.5% of renal stones submitted for chemical analysis were bogus and represented apparent attempts to deceive the physician. A study of patients referred with fever of unknown origin to the National Institutes of Health found that almost 10% had a factitious fever. One can conclude that the incidence of factitious disorder, except in certain specialized clinical settings, is relatively uncommon but may be more frequent than is recognized. Age and gender distribution varies according to the clinical syndromes described in the next section. Patients with the fullblown factitious disorder imposed on self syndrome are most frequently unmarried middleaged men who are estranged from their families. Patients with common factitious disorder are most likely to be unmarried women in their 20s or 30s who work in healthservice jobs such as nursing. Perpetrators of the factitious disorder imposed on another are most often mothers of small children who themselves may have previously engaged in factitious disease behavior or meet the criteria for somatic symptom disorder. B. Etiology Explanations for the apparently nonsensical and bizarre behavior of factitious disorder are largely speculative. Underlying motivations for this behavior are probably heterogeneous and multidetermined. The following explanations have been suggested: 1. The search for nurturance Individuals in the sick role are characteristically excused from societal obligations and cared for by others. When alternative sources of care, support, and nurturance are lacking, a person may deliberately induce illness as a way of seeking such support. Many patients with factitious disorder are themselves caretakers. Factitious illness behavior allows for a reversal of roles: instead of caring for others, the patient assumes the dependent cared for role. 2. Secondary gains Patients with factitious disorders sometimes use illness to obtain disability benefits or release from usual obligations such as working. Their illnesses may elicit from family members attention that might not otherwise be forthcoming. When litigation is involved, the boundary between factitious disorder and malingering becomes blurred or disappears. 3. The need for power & superiority A person who successfully perpetuates a ruse may have a feeling of superiority in his or her capacity to fool others. This has been described as "putting one over" or "duping delight." Thus, the individual can experience a transformation from feeling weak and impotent to feeling clever and powerful over others. Simultaneously the individual may devalue others whom he or she regards as stupid or foolish because they have been deceived. 4. To obtain drugs Some patients have used factitious illness to obtain drugs. Even those patients who have sought controlled substances appear to have done so more for the thrill of fooling the physician than because of addiction. 5. To create a sense of identity A patient with severe characterological defects may have a poor sense of self. The creation of the sick role and the associated pseudologia fantastica (pathologic lying) may provide the patient with a role by which his or her personal identity is established. Such a person is no longer faceless but rather the star player in high drama. 6. To defend against severe anxiety or psychosis Downloaded 20241028 11:17 A Your IP is Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 2 / 11 A patient ©2024 with overwhelming McGraw anxiety Hill. All Rights due to fears Reserved. Terms ofof abandonment Use PrivacyorPolicy powerlessness Notice may use a factitious illness to defend against psychological Accessibility decompensation. Through the perpetuation of a successful fraud and the simultaneous gratification of dependency needs, the patient feels powerful, in control, and cared for. Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC A patient with severe characterological defects may have a poor sense of self. The creation of the sick role and the associated pseudologia fantastica Access Provided by: (pathologic lying) may provide the patient with a role by which his or her personal identity is established. Such a person is no longer faceless but rather the star player in high drama. 6. To defend against severe anxiety or psychosis A patient with overwhelming anxiety due to fears of abandonment or powerlessness may use a factitious illness to defend against psychological decompensation. Through the perpetuation of a successful fraud and the simultaneous gratification of dependency needs, the patient feels powerful, in control, and cared for. C. Genetics No information is available regarding a relationship between factitious disorders and heredity. Clinical Findings A. Signs & Symptoms DSM5 diagnostic criteria do not adequately describe the different clinical syndromes of persons who present with factitious disorder. Three major syndromes have been identified, although some overlap may exist. 1. Factitious disorder imposed on self (peregrinating factitious disorder) The original Munchausen syndrome, as first described by Asher in 1951, consists of the simulation of disease, pseudologia fantastica, and peregrination (wandering). Some patients with this disorder have achieved great notoriety. These patients typically present to emergency rooms at night or on the weekends when they are more likely to encounter inexperienced clinicians and when insurance offices are more likely to be closed. Their symptoms are often dramatic and indicate the need for immediate hospitalization. Once hospitalized, they become "star patients" because of their dramatic symptoms, because of the rarity of their apparent diagnosis (e.g., intermittent Mediterranean fever), or because of the stories that they tell about themselves (e.g., tales of being a foreign university president or a former major league baseball player). These patients confuse physicians because of inconsistencies in their physical and laboratory findings and because of their failure to respond to standard therapeutic measures. They rarely receive visitors, and it is difficult to obtain information concerning prior hospitalizations; their frequent use of aliases makes it difficult to track them. When confronted with their factitious illness behavior, they often become angry, threaten to sue, and sign out of the hospital against medical advice. They then travel to another hospital, where they once again perpetuate their ruses. Personal historical information about factitious disorder imposed on selfsyndrome patients is limited because they are unreliable historians and are reluctant to divulge accurate personal information. What is known may be somewhat selective in that it is derived from a subgroup of patients who have allowed themselves to be studied. These individuals often come from chaotic, stressful childhood homes. They sometimes report that they were institutionalized or hospitalized during childhood, experiences that were not regarded as frightening but rather were considered a reprieve from stress at home. Childhood neuropathic traits (e.g., lying or fire setting) are often reported. Many of these patients have worked in healthrelated fields (e.g., as a hospital corpsman in the military). Many have a history of psychiatric hospitalization and legal difficulties. 2. Common factitious disorder (nonperegrinating) The most common form of factitious disorder is common factitious disorder. Disease presentations may involve dermatologic conditions from self inflicted injuries or infections, blood dyscrasia from the surreptitious use of dicumarol or selfphlebotomy, hypoglycemia from the surreptitious use of insulin, and other diseases. The patient generally has one primary symptom or finding (e.g., anemia) and is characteristically hospitalized on multiple occasions, but the physician or hospital staff never learns the true nature of the underlying "disease." In the process of their hospitalizations, these patients become the object of considerable concern from physicians, colleagues, and family members, with whom they typically have conflicted relationships. Patients with common factitious disorder often lie, exaggerate, and distort the truth, but not to the same extent, or with the same degree of fantasy, as those with the factitious disorder imposed on self. Patients with common factitious disorder may perpetuate the ruse for years before being discovered. Unmasked, these patients typically react with hostility, eliciting angry disbelief from treating physicians, nurses, and other staff. Even in the face of incontrovertible evidence, these patients often continue to deny the true nature of their problems. Patients with common factitious disorder typically come from dysfunctional families and exhibit histrionic or borderline personality characteristics. Factitious Disorder Downloaded Imposed 20241028 on Another 11:17 A Your (Previously IP is Factitious disorder by Proxy). Falsification of physical or psychological signs or symptoms, or Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford;deception. induction of injury or disease, in another, associated with identified Louis Trevisan The Individual presents another individual (victim) to othersPage as ill,3 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility impaired, or injured. The deceptive behavior is evident even in the absence of obvious external rewards. The behavior is not better explained by another mental disorder, such as delusional disorder or another psychotic disorder. Note: the perpetrator, not the victim, receives the diagnosis. those with the factitious disorder imposed on self. Patients with common factitious disorder may perpetuate the ruse for years before being discovered. Unmasked, these patients typically react with hostility, eliciting angry disbelief from treating physicians, nurses, Universidad and other Autónoma de staff. Even in the Guadalajara AC face of incontrovertible evidence, these patients often continue to deny the true nature of their problems. Access Provided by: Patients with common factitious disorder typically come from dysfunctional families and exhibit histrionic or borderline personality characteristics. Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another (Previously Factitious disorder by Proxy). Falsification of physical or psychological signs or symptoms, or induction of injury or disease, in another, associated with identified deception. The Individual presents another individual (victim) to others as ill, impaired, or injured. The deceptive behavior is evident even in the absence of obvious external rewards. The behavior is not better explained by another mental disorder, such as delusional disorder or another psychotic disorder. Note: the perpetrator, not the victim, receives the diagnosis. Specifiers include single and Recurrent Episodes (DSM5). This invidious disorder, in which a mother produces disease in her child, was first described in 1978. Subsequently, hundreds of case reports from all over the world have confirmed this form of child abuse. Every major children's hospital will see several cases per year. In Factitious disorder imposed on another historically referred to as Munchausen syndrome by proxy, the perpetrator (usually the mother) presents a child (usually an infant) for medical treatment of either simulated or factitiously produced disease. For example, the child may have collapsed after the mother surreptitiously administered laxatives or other medications, or the child may have experienced repeated attacks of apnea secondary to suffocation (e.g., by pinching the nostrils). After the child has been hospitalized, the mother is intensely involved in her child's care and with the ward staff. Interestingly, the mother is surprisingly willing to sign consent forms for invasive diagnostic procedures or treatment. The child may inexplicably improve when the mother is out of the hospital for a period of time. The child's father is usually uninvolved or absent. When the mother is confronted with suspicions (or proof) that she has caused the child's illness, she often reacts with angry denial, and hospital staff may also express disbelief. Reasonable suspicion of factitious disorder imposed on another mandates reporting, as a form of child abuse, to the appropriate child protective services. Children who have been victims of factitious disorder imposed on another have a high mortality rate (almost 10% die before reaching adulthood). Studies of their siblings show a similarly high mortality rate because this diseaseproducing behavior may be perpetrated on subsequent children. These children may need to be placed outside the home (e.g., with other relatives or in a fostercare setting). B. Psychological Testing Psychological test results of factitious disorder imposed on self patients reflect severe characterological problems, often of the sociopathic, narcissistic, or histrionic type. Approximately 30% of factitious disorder imposed on self patients have some form of cerebral dysfunction. This dysfunction is most commonly demonstrated by the patient's verbal IQ score being significantly greater than his or her performance IQ score, a finding possibly related to pseudologia fantastica. Test results of patients with common factitious disorder are consistent with histrionic or borderline personality traits, somatic preoccupation, and conflicts about sexuality. Test results of the perpetrators of factitious disorder imposed on another may reflect personality disorders (e.g., narcissistic) and concurrent Axis I disorders (e.g., major depression). Frequently they demonstrate no clearcut abnormality. C. Laboratory Findings Laboratory testing may disclose inconsistent findings, not typical of known physical diseases (e.g., the pattern of hypokalemia that occurs with surreptitious ingestion of diuretics). The presence of toxins or medications, the use of which the patient denies, may establish the diagnosis of factitious disease behavior. For example, phenolphthalein may be present in the stool of a baby who is experiencing diarrhea as a result of Munchausen syndrome by proxy. D. Neuroimaging No neuroimaging studies have been reported specifically for factitious disorder. However, in view of the extensive lying in which these persons engage and some similarities to malingering, it would be reasonable to expect similarities to findings with lying/malingering (see later discussion). E. Course of Illness The deceptive nature of persons with factitious illness behavior precludes good data concerning either the course of the disease or the prognosis. We do know that some patients with common factitious disorder imposed on self may persist in their symptom production for years. They may give it up spontaneously or perhaps after being "caught" and confronted. Persons with Munchausen syndrome may perpetrate their simulation of disease for decades, often traveling widely and using aliases to make tracking more difficult. Some patients die as a result of miscalculations in their illness Downloaded 20241028 productions. Other patients11:17 tradeAtheYour IP isof the hospital for the drama of the courtroom and sue physicians for causing the very disease that the drama Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 4 / 11 patient him/herself ©2024 McGraw Hill.created (e.g., All Rights suing a surgeon Reserved. Termsforofpostoperative Use Privacy infections that were Policy Notice selfinduced). Accessibility Differential Diagnosis (Including Comorbidity) E. Course of Illness Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC The deceptive nature of persons with factitious illness behavior precludes good data concerning either theAccess course of the Provided by: disease or the prognosis. We do know that some patients with common factitious disorder imposed on self may persist in their symptom production for years. They may give it up spontaneously or perhaps after being "caught" and confronted. Persons with Munchausen syndrome may perpetrate their simulation of disease for decades, often traveling widely and using aliases to make tracking more difficult. Some patients die as a result of miscalculations in their illness productions. Other patients trade the drama of the hospital for the drama of the courtroom and sue physicians for causing the very disease that the patient him/herself created (e.g., suing a surgeon for postoperative infections that were selfinduced). Differential Diagnosis (Including Comorbidity) As with all somatic symtom disorders, the diagnosis of factitious disorders involves ruling out the presence of a genuine disease process. Patients with factitious disorder often have physical disease, but the disease is the result of deliberate and surreptitious behavior such as selfphlebotomy. Occasionally, a patient with a genuine physical disease (e.g., diabetes mellitus) will learn how to manipulate symptoms and findings in such a way as to create a combination of physical disease and factitious disorder. In such cases, both the disease process and the behavior will require therapeutic attention. Factitious disordersmust also be distinguished from malingering; the difference here is one of motivation. The person with malingering has a definable external goal that motivates the behavior, such as disability payments from an insurance company, whereas with factitious disorders, the patient's goal is to seek the sick role for the psychological needs it fulfills. Malingering and factitious disorders often overlap. Patients with factitious disorders may also meet the criteria for other somatic symptom and related disorders, particularly somatic symptom disorder or other Axis I disorders such as major depression or, more rarely, schizophrenia. Most patients with factitious disorders are comorbid for one of the cluster B personality disorders (i.e., antisocial, borderline, histrionic, narcissistic). Treatment Therapeutic approaches to factitious disorder must be different from those used to treat specific disease states. A factitious disorder represents disordered behavior that is determined by widely varied and often multiple motivations. The clinician must evaluate and develop a separate treatment plan for each patient. Further, because factitious behavior is often associated with severe personality disorders, the clinician must avoid splitting and other manipulative behaviors by the patient. Thus, a multidisciplinary management strategy involving attorneys, nurses, social workers, and other professionals is essential. Unfortunately, for many patients with factitious disorder, the goal must be to contain symptoms and avoid unnecessary and expensive medical care rather than to effect a cure. A. Psychopharmacologic Interventions There are no pharmacologic treatments that are specific for factitious diseases. B. Psychotherapeutic Interventions The overwhelming majority of patients with factitious illness have severe underlying personality disorders. Despite their superficial confidence and, at times, braggadocio, these patients are fragile. They are not candidates for confrontative insightoriented psychotherapy and may decompensate in such treatment. The techniques described in this section are suggested for use by either psychiatrists or other members of the medical treatment team as indicated. Many patients completely reject any psychiatric treatment, and therapeutic efforts must be made by nonpsychiatric personnel. 1. Individual psychotherapy Psychotherapy needs to be supportive, empathic, and nonconfrontative. At times just "being there" and allowing the patient to talk, even if much of the talk consists of pseudologia fantastica, provides sufficient support for the patient to no longer have the immediate need to engage in factitious illness behavior. Such treatment is not curative but helps prevent further iatrogenic complications and high medical utilization. 2. Facesaving opportunities At times the patient will discard the symptom if he or she does not need to admit the behavior. For example, the patient may be told that the problem will resolve with physical therapy, medications, or other treatment techniques. The patient may use such an opportunity to discard symptoms in a face saving manner and behavior without ever overtly acknowledging culpability for factitious illness behavior. 3. Inexact interpretations Downloaded 20241028 11:17 A Your IP is Insightoriented Chapter psychotherapy 22: Factitious Disorders is almost always contraindicated. and Malingering, Charles V. Ford;However, it may be useful to make interpretations without direct confrontation. Louis Trevisan Page 5 /For 11 ©2024 example,McGraw Hill. a patient All Rights whose Reserved. factitious Terms ofisUse illness behavior tied toPrivacy Policy losses or Notice separation Accessibility might be told in a very general way that it seems that he or she has difficulty in dealing with disappointments in life. At times the patient will discard the symptom if he or she does not need to admit the behavior. For example, the patient may be told that the problem Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC will resolve with physical therapy, medications, or other treatment techniques. The patient may use such an opportunity to discard symptoms in a face Access Provided by: saving manner and behavior without ever overtly acknowledging culpability for factitious illness behavior. 3. Inexact interpretations Insightoriented psychotherapy is almost always contraindicated. However, it may be useful to make interpretations without direct confrontation. For example, a patient whose factitious illness behavior is tied to losses or separation might be told in a very general way that it seems that he or she has difficulty in dealing with disappointments in life. 4. Therapeutic doublebinds The patient who is suspected of factitious illness behavior might be told that such suspicions exist—and that if symptoms fail to respond to a proposed treatment, then such a failure would be confirmation of factitious illness. Although this technique may be symptomatically effective, there are obvious questions as to its ethical appropriateness. For example, is it ethical to lie to a lying patient in order to effect change? 5. Family therapy Patients with simple factitious disorder often come from dysfunctional families and are experiencing current conflicted interpersonal relationships. The patient's factitious illness behavior may be a way of controlling or manipulating the family in order to obtain a sense of power or gratification of dependency needs. Family therapy may be one way to address distorted communications in the family and provide for the more appropriate expression of needs. C. Other Interventions 1. Staff meetings When factitious disorder is suspected, the treating physician must recruit a multidisciplinary task force to assist with ethics and management. Such a task force, and associated staff meetings, educates all health care personnel as to the nature of the disorder, facilitates communication in such a manner as to defuse attempts by the patient to split staff, and ensures a united front for treatment. The multidisciplinary task force might include hospital administrators, the hospital attorney, a chaplain or ethicist, the patient's primary physician, a psychiatrist, and representatives from the nursing staff. Although this degree of involvement may seem like overkill, it is necessary in order to anticipate medicolegal complications. 2. Confrontation When factitious disorder is suspected or has been confirmed, the medical staff must confront the patient. Such confrontation is generally best accomplished with several of the multidisciplinary staff members present. The staff should communicate to the patient that they know he or she has been surreptitiously producing or simulating the disease and that such behavior is indicative of internal distress. The staff should suggest to the patient that it is time to reformulate the illness from a physical disease to a psychological disorder. The patient should be told that the treatment team is concerned and that appropriate help and treatment can be made available. Despite such a supportive approach, many patients will continue to deny that they have contributed to their illness and will angrily reject any referral for psychological help. 3. Treatment of comorbid disorders Patients must be evaluated carefully for comorbid psychiatric disorders such as major depression or schizophrenia. The presence of another Axis I disorder is relatively uncommon, but, when present, it must be treated before proceeding with psychotherapy and other management. D. Treatment Issues in Factitious Disorder Imposed on Another When the victim of factitious disorder imposed on another is a child, it may be necessary to place the child in foster care in order to protect his or her health and life. The child will require supportive psychological assistance to deal with separation from the parent and changes in his or her environment. Perpetrators of factitious disorder imposed on another, usually mothers, generally have severe personality disorders, which are very difficult to treat. This is especially true when the perpetrator continues to deny her behavior. Many psychiatrists believe that return of the child to the mother must depend on the mother's acknowledgment of her behavior, the requirement that she stop it, and her recognition of the needs and rights of the child. These mothers may have severe narcissistic personality disorder. They may view others merely as objects to be manipulated rather than as separate persons with feelings, needs, and rights. When there is a history of an unexplained death of a sibling, extra care must be taken to ensure the safety of Downloaded the child. 20241028 11:17 A Your IP is Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 6 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights E. Ethical & Medicolegal Issues Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility Many ethical and medicolegal issues are raised in treating factitious disorders. Some physicians may believe that because patients with these disorders Perpetrators of factitious disorder imposed on another, usually mothers, generally have severe personalityUniversidad Autónoma disorders, which dedifficult are very Guadalajara AC to treat. This is especially true when the perpetrator continues to deny her behavior. Many psychiatrists believe thatAccess return of the Provided by:child to the mother must depend on the mother's acknowledgment of her behavior, the requirement that she stop it, and her recognition of the needs and rights of the child. These mothers may have severe narcissistic personality disorder. They may view others merely as objects to be manipulated rather than as separate persons with feelings, needs, and rights. When there is a history of an unexplained death of a sibling, extra care must be taken to ensure the safety of the child. E. Ethical & Medicolegal Issues Many ethical and medicolegal issues are raised in treating factitious disorders. Some physicians may believe that because patients with these disorders are liars, they can treat them in a cavalier manner. The following discussion demonstrates that this is not the case. 1. Confidentiality Because a patient with factitious disorder has presented himself or herself to the physician fraudulently, violating the traditional doctor–patient relationship, a legitimate question can be raised as to whether this invalidates the physician's obligation of confidentiality. To what extent should such an individual be allowed to perpetuate fraud, as it may affect family members, friends, and other physicians? This question is not easily answered, but from a medicolegal standpoint any violation of confidentiality must be in the interest of protecting the patient's health or significantly reducing the damage to others. Such violations should not occur capriciously but only after careful consideration and consultation with the multidisciplinary task force. 2. Surreptitious room searches The medical literature on factitious disorders contains multiple descriptions of searches of patients' rooms after they have been sent off for testing or for other reasons. Syringes and other paraphernalia may have been found, thereby confirming the diagnosis. Such searches, however, violate patients' civil rights and should be undertaken only after careful consideration and consultation with the multidisciplinary task force. 3. Withdrawal of medical care The physician who finds that he or she has been the object of the fraudulent seeking of medical care is likely to react with anger and possibly rejection. The expenditure of professional time and the use of scarce medical supplies for patients with factitious disorders may be questioned. However, an analogy can be drawn to the question of whether medical care should be withdrawn from a patient with liver cirrhosis who continues to drink alcohol or from a patient with emphysema who continues to smoke cigarettes. The point at which one starts to enter the "slippery slope" is always an issue for debate. Medical care should be withdrawn only after careful consideration of the medicolegal ramifications. 4. Involuntary psychiatric treatment Many patients with factitious disorder engage in selfinjurious behavior that could permanently affect body function or cause death. Involuntary psychiatric treatment has been suggested but is generally rejected by the courts. In one case, a judge provided an "outpatient commitment" for a patient and ordered that all of her (publicly funded) medical care be coordinated by a guardian. Such an approach seems eminently reasonable, but it may be difficult to effect in many states, especially if the patient is covered by private insurance. 5. Malpractice lawsuits On the surface, one might ask how or why a patient might ever initiate a malpractice lawsuit against a physician when the patient is responsible for the medical illness. Such lawsuits, however, have occurred and can emerge in one of two different forms. One form of lawsuit can occur because many of these patients have severe borderline personality disorder. Such individuals are likely to idealize a physician initially and then later devalue him or her. With such devaluation comes rage and a resort to malpractice suits as a way of inflicting injury. The lay people who comprise juries are not knowledgeable about factitious disorders and may side with the patient. Another form of lawsuit can occur when the patient admits factitious disorder and sues the physician for failure to recognize it. In other words, "I was lying to you, but this is a recognized medical illness, and you were incompetent not to have recognized my fraudulent behavior." One such lawsuit was settled out of court with a payment to the patient. 6. Reporting requirements If the health of another individual is involved (particularly that of a child), the clinician is legally required to report his or her suspicions to the appropriate authorities. Downloaded 20241028In11:17 the case of children, A Your IP is this is a legal requirement equivalent to that of reporting any suspected child abuse. Insofar as the Chapter report is made in good faith, the physician is exemptCharles 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, V. Ford; Louis from prosecution Trevisan for the violation of confidentiality. Page 7 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility Complications/Adverse Outcomes of Treatment lying to you, but this is a recognized medical illness, and you were incompetent not to have recognized my fraudulent behavior." One such lawsuit was settled out of court with a payment to the patient. Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC Access Provided by: 6. Reporting requirements If the health of another individual is involved (particularly that of a child), the clinician is legally required to report his or her suspicions to the appropriate authorities. In the case of children, this is a legal requirement equivalent to that of reporting any suspected child abuse. Insofar as the report is made in good faith, the physician is exempt from prosecution for the violation of confidentiality. Complications/Adverse Outcomes of Treatment Patients with factitious disorder have a remarkable ability to obtain hospitalization and to be treated with invasive procedures. As a result, these patients often experience unnecessary operations such as nephrectomies and even pancreatectomies. They are at risk for a number of iatrogenic complications, and physicians may contribute to drug dependence. Hundreds of thousands of dollars, millions in some cases, may be spent in the diagnosis and treatment of surreptitious and selfinduced illness. The physician is also at risk. When angered, patients with these disorders may initiate lawsuits and, at the very least, will generally create disarray and dissension among their medical caretakers. For the victim of the factitious disorder imposed on another, the clinician's failure to recognize the disorder or to take decisive action may result in continued medical treatment, medical complications, or even death. Prognosis Relatively little is known about the longterm outcome of factitious disorder. Some patients die as a result of their factitious illness behavior, and others experience severe medical complications including the loss of organs (e.g., pancreas or kidney) or limbs. If the factitious disorder is the outgrowth of, for example, a psychotic depression, the prognosis is better than if the factitious illness results from severe personality disorder, as is usually the case. Although there are reports of successful psychotherapeutic intervention with some patients, there is no evidence of continued remission on followup. Factitious disorder imposed on another appears to be relatively refractory to treatment, although the ultimate outcome for most of these patients is unknown. When confronted, some patients with common factitious disorder enter psychotherapy and appear to improve and demonstrate fewer symptoms. Some patients deny their illness and merely change physicians, continuing their factitious illness behavior elsewhere; other patients deny their illness but apparently cease their behavior after being confronted with it. The longterm prognosis of factitious disorder imposed on another is not encouraging. Victims have a high mortality rate during childhood, and those who survive childhood may develop somatoform disorders or factitious disorders upon reaching adulthood. Because this is a recently recognized disorder, longterm followup information is not yet available. Asher R. Munchausen syndrome. Lancet. 1951;1:339. [PubMed: 14805062] Eisendrath SJ, McNeil DE. Factitious physical disorders, litigation and mortality. Psychosomatics. 2004;45:350–352. [PubMed: 15232050] Ford CV. Deception syndromes: Factitious disorders and malingering. In: Levensen JL, ed. Textbook of Psychosomatic Medicine. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Publishing; 2005:297–309. Krahn LE, Li H, O'Connor MK. Patients who strive to be ill: Factitious disorder with physical symptoms. Am J Psychiatry. 2003;160:1163–1168. [PubMed: 12777276] Sheridan MS. The deceit continues: An updated literature review of Munchausen syndrome by proxy. Child Abuse Negl. 2003;27:431–451. [PubMed: 12686328] MALINGERING Malingering is listed in DSM5 as a V code (V65.2) or Z code (76.5). The essential feature of malingering is the intentional production of false or grossly exaggerated physical or psychological symptoms, motivated by external incentives such as avoiding military duty, avoiding work, obtaining financial compensation, evading criminal prosecution, or obtaining drugs (DSM5). General Considerations Malingering differs from factitious disorder in that it is a deliberate disease simulation with a specific goal (e.g., to obtain opiates). Malingering is Downloaded 20241028 11:17 A Your IP is underdiagnosed, often because of the physician's fear of making false accusations. However, covert surveillance has indicated that as many as 20% of Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 8 / 11 pain clinic patients misrepresent the extent of their disability. ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility Malingering may include the deliberate production of disease or the exaggeration, elaboration, or false report of symptoms. The essential diagnostic exaggerated physical or psychological symptoms, motivated by external incentives such as avoiding military duty, avoiding work, obtaining financial Universidad Autónoma de Guadalajara AC compensation, evading criminal prosecution, or obtaining drugs (DSM5). Access Provided by: General Considerations Malingering differs from factitious disorder in that it is a deliberate disease simulation with a specific goal (e.g., to obtain opiates). Malingering is underdiagnosed, often because of the physician's fear of making false accusations. However, covert surveillance has indicated that as many as 20% of pain clinic patients misrepresent the extent of their disability. Malingering may include the deliberate production of disease or the exaggeration, elaboration, or false report of symptoms. The essential diagnostic issue for malingering is the determination that the person is willfully simulating disease for a defined purpose. But no physician is a mind reader. Thus conscious intent must be inferred from other behaviors and psychological testing. Malingering is not a medical/psychiatric diagnosis but rather a situation in which someone is deliberately using a bogus illness to obtain a recognizable goal. The goal may be deferment from military service, escape from incarceration (e.g., not guilty by reason of insanity), procurement of controlled substances, or monetary compensation in a personal injury lawsuit. The judgment of the morality of malingering is largely a matter of the observer and circumstances. Most people would regard the defraudment of an insurance company, through a false injury, as an antisocial act. In contrast, the malingering of a prisoner of war, who is attempting to manipulate his or her captors, would be seen by most compatriots as a skillful coping mechanism. A. Epidemiology Malingering is most frequently seen in settings in which there may be an advantage to being sick (e.g., in the military or in front of worker's compensation review boards). The prevalence of malingering is not known, but it is most likely underdiagnosed. B. Etiology Malingering, by definition, is determined by a person's willful behavior to use illness for an external goal. It has been proposed, however, that malingering is one extreme of a continuum of conscious–unconscious motivation that is anchored at the other extreme by conversion symptoms. Many simulated symptoms lie somewhere between these extremes and have both conscious and unconscious components. Patients with antisocial personality disorder are believed to be more inclined to malinger, using physical symptoms as one of their means to manipulate or defraud others. All personality types, however, have been described in association with malingering, and it can be viewed as a coping mechanism when other coping strategies are ineffective. For example, a malingered symptom may be one mechanism for an exploited laborer to get out of an intolerable work situation. C. Genetics There are no reported studies that have linked malingering with heredity. Clinical Findings A. Signs & Symptoms Malingering may involve either exaggeration or elaboration of genuine illness for secondary gain (e.g., continued disability after a mild industrial injury) or the simulation of disease (e.g., faked injuries after a contrived automobile accident). Malingering may be inferred in persons who behave differently and demonstrate different function when they think they are not being observed. For example, insurance companies may make covert video recordings of "disabled workers" who waterski on weekends. Psychiatric disorders may also be malingered. Perhaps the most common of these are posttraumatic stress disorder and postconcussive syndrome. These disorders are characterized by subjective, often difficult to quantify, symptoms and a higher probability of being associated with potential compensable injuries. B. Psychological Testing Malingered psychological symptoms can often be detected from psychological testing. The validity scales of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory2 (MMPI2) may demonstrate changes indicative of false reporting. Mental status examinations and psychological testing may reveal findings that are inconsistent with, or clearly not typical of, the simulated disorder. Forced choice tests may indicate that the suspected malingerer has in a statistically significant manner answered questions in an incorrect way, thereby demonstrating he/she actually knew the correct answer. Downloaded 20241028 11:17 A Your IP is C. Laboratory Chapter Findings 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 9 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility There are no specific laboratory tests for malingering. Some diagnostic tests may be abnormal if the person is deliberately exacerbating an existing disease or creating a new disease (e.g., surreptitious use of a diuretic). Malingered psychological symptoms can often be detected from psychological testing. The validity scales ofUniversidad the Minnesota Autónoma de Guadalajara Multiphasic Personality AC Inventory2 (MMPI2) may demonstrate changes indicative of false reporting. Mental status examinations and psychological testing may reveal findings Access Provided by: that are inconsistent with, or clearly not typical of, the simulated disorder. Forced choice tests may indicate that the suspected malingerer has in a statistically significant manner answered questions in an incorrect way, thereby demonstrating he/she actually knew the correct answer. C. Laboratory Findings There are no specific laboratory tests for malingering. Some diagnostic tests may be abnormal if the person is deliberately exacerbating an existing disease or creating a new disease (e.g., surreptitious use of a diuretic). D. Neuroimaging Although no specific test utilizing neuroimaging to detect malingering has yet been standardized, there is considerable evidence that deception does induce brain activation. In one recently reported study of feigned memory impairment, findings included bilateral activation of prefrontal cerebral regions with both genders and different mother tongues, suggesting the importance of these regions during malingering and deception in general. This finding is consistent with a number of other studies that suggest attempted deception is associated with greater activation of executive brain functions (anterior cingulate and prefrontal cortices) as compared to truthfulness. E. Course of Illness A malingering symptom is generally discarded when the desired goal (e.g., financial compensation) is achieved or if the malingerer suspects that the deception has been detected. On occasion, with longstanding simulated symptoms, the symptom may persist, perhaps to save face or because it has been incorporated into the person's identity. Differential Diagnosis The differential diagnosis of malingering includes physical disease; factitious disorder (i.e., with no discernible motive); somatoform disorders, particularly conversion disorder (in which the motive is unconscious); and pseudomalingering. In the last situation, the patient believes that he or she is in conscious control of a symptom but actually has a disease (e.g., a person who is psychotic pretends to be psychotic in order to hide from himself the fact that he is not in control of his mental processes). Treatment "Treatment" of malingering is, in a sense, a contradiction in terms because the "patient" does not want to be well until the desired goal (e.g., financial compensation) is achieved. The physician must be alert in order to avoid becoming an accomplice in the malingerer's manipulations. A. Psychopharmacologic Interventions There are no known psychopharmacologic interventions for malingering. B. Psychotherapeutic Interventions There are no known psychotherapeutic interventions for malingering. C. Subtle Confrontation At times, subtle hints to the malingerer that the ruse has been detected will motivate the malingerer to drop the malingered symptom in a facesaving manner. Complications/Adverse Outcomes of Treatment It is commonly believed that malingered symptoms disappear when the malingering has achieved the patient's goal. In the process of the illness, the malingerer may experience iatrogenic complications of diagnostic or therapeutic procedures. A psychological complication occurs when, after years of litigation, the malingerer has come to believe in the illness (i.e., through learned behavior) and does not relinquish the symptom after successful resolution of the lawsuit. Prognosis Downloaded Little is known20241028 11:17 A Your about the prognosis IP is of malingering. Persons who are successful at perpetuating disease simulations do not come to medical attention. Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 10 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility Kay NR, MorrisJones H. Pain clinic management of medicolegal litigants. Injury. 1998;29:305. [PubMed: 9743753] malingerer may experience iatrogenic complications of diagnostic or therapeutic procedures. A psychological complication occurs when, after years of Universidad litigation, the malingerer has come to believe in the illness (i.e., through learned behavior) and does not relinquish Autónoma the symptom de successful after Guadalajara AC resolution of the lawsuit. Access Provided by: Prognosis Little is known about the prognosis of malingering. Persons who are successful at perpetuating disease simulations do not come to medical attention. Kay NR, MorrisJones H. Pain clinic management of medicolegal litigants. Injury. 1998;29:305. [PubMed: 9743753] Lee TMC, Liu HL, Chan CCH, et al. Neural correlates of feigned memory impairment. Neuroimage. 2005;28:305–313. [PubMed: 16165373] Miller LS, Donders J. Subjective symptomatology after traumatic head injury. Brain Inj. 2001;15:297–304. [PubMed: 11299131] Pankratz L. Patients Who Deceive: Assessment and Management of Risk in Providing Health Care and Financial Benefits. Springfield, IL: Charles C Thomas; 1998. Downloaded 20241028 11:17 A Your IP is Chapter 22: Factitious Disorders and Malingering, Charles V. Ford; Louis Trevisan Page 11 / 11 ©2024 McGraw Hill. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Policy Notice Accessibility