Factitious disorders and pathological self-harm in a hospital population: an interdisciplinary challenge - 01/09/11
, Gudrun Scholler, M.D. b, Matthias Rose, M.D. a, Hans Willenberg, M.D. c, Burghard F Klapp, M.D. a : ProfessorAbstract |
Factitious disorder, Munchausen’s Syndrome, and deliberate self-harm have recently been conceptualized as different facets of self-destructive behavior. A descriptive typological classification has been presented by Willenberg et al., but has not yet been tested with a clinical sample. The instrument distinguishes between direct self-harm (e.g., self-inflicted wounds), self-induced disease (e.g., factitious fever), and indirect self-harm delegated to medical staff (e.g., repeated operations occasioned by feigned symptoms). All patients referred to the psychosomatic-psychotherapeutic liaison-consultation service or to the outpatients’ department within 14 months (n=995) and all patients discharged from in-patient psychosomatic-psychotherapeutic treatment within 2 months (n=62) were assessed. Expert instruction and supervision were provided for the diagnosticians. The assessment was continued for a subsequent year, without special supervision (n=1,058). Self-destructive behaviors were diagnosed in 7.5% of the cases in the first sample, with certainty (59.5%) or on suspicion (40.5%). In the subsequent sample without supervision, the rate reduced to 3.6%. Referrals had come from almost all clinical departments, including the emergency unit (26%), surgery, internal intensive care, endocrinology (9.5% each), neurology, infectiology, nephrology (7.1% each), dermatology, gastro-enterology, cardiology (4.8% each) and surgical intensive care (2.4%). The occurrence of pathological self-destructive phenomena is underrated when using only the ICD-criteria. The rate is influenced by diagnostic attention.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Self-destructive behavior, Factitious disorder, Self-harm, General hospital, Epidemiology, Co-morbidity
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Vol 24 - N° 3
P. 164-171 - mai 2002 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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