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The Stockholm Syndrome. By Eric Powell. What is it?. Positive emotions felt towards a captor or someone that intentionally harassed or abused oneself. Historical Overview. Robbery in Sweden Bank employees were held hostage by captors
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The Stockholm Syndrome By Eric Powell
What is it? Positive emotions felt towards a captor or someone that intentionally harassed or abused oneself
Historical Overview • Robbery in Sweden • Bank employees were held hostage by captors • Officials asked to help improve the situation, but the employees refused • After six days, the employees actually defended their captors • Never added to the DSM
Signs/Symptoms • Hostages get mad at police • They start liking their captors • The captors start liking the hostages • They help their captors commit crimes occasionally
Treatments • Medications can be applied for short-term symptoms such as sleeping problems • Therapy can be applied for long-term symptoms
Is it common? • No, Stockholm Syndrome is not common. • Stockholm Syndrome is a relatively rare disease.
Case Study • Patty Hearst kidnapped in 1974 • Held captive for two months • She helped her captors make a plan a robbery
Case Study (continued) • Mary McElroy kidnapped in 1933 • Three captors were caught • She defended them in court
http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Stockholm+Syndromehttp://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Stockholm+Syndrome • http://www.medscape.com/features/slideshow/rare-psych • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome