Friday, August 2, 2019
Multiple Personality Disorder :: Medical Medicine disorders Essays
Multiple Personality Disorder       Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD) or Dissociative Identity  Disorder (DID) was first acknowledged in the 1700's but was  not understood so therefore it was forgotten. Many cases  show up in medical records through the years, but in 1905,  Dr. Morton Prince wrote a book about MPD that is a  foundation for the disease. A few years after it was  published Sigmund Freud dismissed the affliction and this  dropped it from being discussed at any credible mental  health meetings. Since then the disorder has been overlooked  and misdiagnosed as either schizophrenia or psychosis. Many  in the medical profession did not believe that a person  could unknowingly have more than one personality or person  inside one body, even after the in the 1950's Three Faces of  Eve was published by two psychiatrist. In 1993, records  showed that three to five thousand patients were being  treated for MPD compared to the hundred cases reported ten  years earlier. There is still as increase in the number of  cases being reported as the scientific community learns more  and more about the disease and the public is becoming more  and more aware of this mental disorder. There are still many  questions left unanswered about the disease, like "Is it  genetic?" or "Is a certain type of personality more  vulnerable to the disorder?" but many aspects of how people  come by the disorder are already answered (Clark, 1993,  p.17-19) MPD is commonly found in adults who were  recurrently abused mentally, physically, emotionally, and/or  sexually as young children, between birth to 8 years of age.  The child uses a process called dissociation to remove  him/herself from the abusive situation. Dissociation is when  a child makes up an imaginary personality to take control of  the mind and body while the child is being abused. The child  can imagine many personalities but usually there is a  personality for every feeling and or emotion that was  involved during the abuse (BoyyM, 1998, p.1). As an adult,  the abused child finds it hard to keep track of time and may  have episodes of amnesia. Other symptoms that will appear in  adults with MPD are depression, auditory and visual  hallucinations (hearing voices) and suicidal thoughts.  Another major symptom is when the adult has no recollection  of their childhood. The adult with MPD has no idea they were  abused as children and also unaware of the other  personalities living inside of their head.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Multiple Personality Disorder is when there is "the  presence of two or more distinct identities or  personalities, each with its own relatively enduring pattern  of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the  environment and self"(BoyyM, 1998, p.1). There can be  anywhere from two to over a hundred different personalities.  					    
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