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Why Can’t the Prince Walk?

Why Can’t the Prince Walk?.

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Why Can’t the Prince Walk?

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  1. Why Can’t the Prince Walk? There is an ancient Persian legend about a physician named Rhazes who was called into the palace for the purpose of diagnosing and treating a young prince. Apparently, the prince could not walk. After the usual examination, Rhazes determined that there was nothing wrong with the prince’s legs, at least not physically. With little more than a hunch, Rhazes set out to treat what may be the first recorded case of conversion. In doing so, he took a risk: Rhazes unexpectedly walked into the Prince’s bathroom brandishing a dagger and threatened to kill him. Upon seeing him, “the startled prince abruptly fled, leaving his clothes, his dignity, and undoubtedly part of his self-esteem behind.”

  2. Somatoform Disorders • Characterized by complaints of physical problems or symptoms that cannot be explained by physical causes. • Illnesses are not purposefully “faked,” they seem to serve a psychological need; hence, they are classified as psychological disorders.

  3. Types of Somatoform Disorders

  4. Koro Syndrome: a culture-bound somatoform disorder, found primarily in China, in which people fear that their genitals are shrinking. Dhat syndrome: a culture-bound somatoform disorder, found primarily among Asian-Indian males, characterized by excessive fears over the loss of seminal fluid. Culture-Bound Somatoform Disorders

  5. Psychoanalysis: seeks to uncover and bring unconscious conflicts that originated in childhood into conscious awareness. Behavioral therapy: removes sources of secondary reinforcement (sympathy, etc.). Cognitive-behavioral therapy: restructures distorted beliefs to help people replace exaggerated illness-related beliefs with rational alternatives; also employs exposure with response prevention. Somatoform Disorders:Treatment

  6. A form of feigned illness in which the person either fakes being ill or makes himself ill. Differs from somatoform disorders because the symptoms are intentionally induced. Munchausen by proxy: a pernicious form of child maltreatment in which people intentionally falsify or induce physical or emotional illness or injury in a child or dependent person. Named for an 18th century German Baron who was famous for entertaining his friends with tales of outrageous adventures. Munchausen Syndrome

  7. Dissociative disorder: a disorder in which a person experiences alterations in memory, identity, or consciousness Depersonalization Disorder: characterized by the persistent or recurrent episodes in which the sufferer experiences feelings of unreality or detachment from one’s self or one’s body. Dissociative fugue: a dissociative disorder in which a person suddenly and unexpectedly travels away from home or work and is unable to recall the past. Dissociative Identity Disorder: a person exhibits two or more personality states, each with its own patterns of thinking and behaving Dissociative amnesia: the inability to recall important personal events or information; is usually associated with stressful events Dissociative Disorders

  8. Dissociative Amnesia

  9. Dissociative Identity Disorder • At least two distinct personalities exist within the person, each having a relatively enduring and distinct pattern of perceiving, thinking and feeling. • Two or more of these personalities repeatedly take complete control of the individual. • There is a failure to recall important personal information too substantial to be accounted for by ordinary forgetfulness. • The disorder cannot be accounted for by the effects of a psychoactive substance or a general medical condition.

  10. Real Name: Chris Sizemore Eve White: timid housewife Eve Black: libidinous and antisocial personality Jane: integrated personality who can accept her aggressive urges, but still engage in socially appropriate behavior. Therapy led to the integration of the three personalities. Later, however, Sizemore’s personality later fractured into 22 individual personalities, and she reentered therapy. The Three Faces of Eve

  11. Sybil • Assignment: Who is Sybil? • What was her disorder? • Was it successfully treated? How?

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