Factitious disorder

Last updated: February 23, 2023

Factitious disorder

psych exam 2

psych exam 2

Cluster A personality disorders
Cluster B personality disorders
Cluster C personality disorders
Delusional disorder
Schizoaffective disorder
Schizophrenia
Schizophreniform disorder
Factitious disorder
Somatic symptom disorder
Alcohol use disorder
Cannabis use disorder
Cocaine use disorder
Opioid use disorder
Tobacco use disorder
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Hallucinogens: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Alcohol: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Other depressants: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Stimulants: Pathology review
Childhood and early-onset psychological disorders: Pathology review
Developmental and learning disorders: Pathology review
Malingering, factitious disorders and somatoform disorders: Pathology review
Personality disorders: Pathology review
Psychiatric emergencies: Pathology review
Schizophrenia spectrum disorders: Pathology review
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Clinical sciences
Autism spectrum disorder: Clinical sciences
Approach to antisocial, borderline, histrionic, and narcissistic (cluster B) personality disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to avoidant, dependent, and obsessive-compulsive (cluster C) personality disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to paranoid, schizoid, and schizotypal (cluster A) personality disorders: Clinical sciences
Substance use disorder: Clinical sciences
Alcohol use disorder: Clinical sciences
Alcohol withdrawal: Clinical sciences
Approach to benzodiazepine and barbiturate use, intoxication, and overdose: Clinical sciences
Approach to hallucinogen, inhalant, and cannabis use, intoxication, and overdose: Clinical sciences
Opioid intoxication and overdose: Clinical sciences
Opioid use disorder: Clinical sciences
Opioid withdrawal syndrome: Clinical sciences
Approach to stimulant use, intoxication, and overdose: Clinical sciences
Tobacco use: Clinical sciences
Alcohol, tobacco, cannabinoid, and substance use in pregnancy: Clinical sciences
Schizophrenia and related disorders: Clinical sciences
Approach to somatic symptom and related disorders: Clinical sciences
Atypical antidepressants
Opioid agonists, mixed agonist-antagonists and partial agonists
Opioid antagonists

Transcript

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Factitious disorder, which is sometimes called Munchausen syndrome, is where an individual fabricates or exaggerates physical or psychological symptoms because they enjoy being in the “sick role”.

These symptoms are sometimes faked but may also be induced; for example, a person with factitious disorder might purposefully ingest something to induce vomiting.

Factitious disorder is listed in the DSM-5 as a somatic symptom disorder.

But unlike other disorders in that group, individuals don’t experience any symptoms, nor are they concerned that they will develop any symptoms.

Factitious disorder can happen as a single episode, but generally individuals have recurrent hospitalizations and are very knowledgeable about the symptoms they are trying to pass off as real.

Individuals with factitious disorder are generally motivated by the attention and sympathy that they receive when pretending to be sick.

These motivations are often subconscious, which is to say that individuals often don’t even realize why they fabricate their symptoms.

Importantly, individuals with this disorder are usually not faking their symptoms for money, time off of work, access to medications, or any other obvious external reward; if this were the case, it’d be a psychological condition known as malingering.

A related diagnosis is “factitious disorder imposed on another” which is also called factitious disorder by proxy or Munchausen syndrome by proxy.

In this form of the disorder, one person deliberately makes a second person ill without that person’s knowledge.