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Dissociative Identity Disorder

Formerly Multiple Personality Disorder

What Is It?

DID/MPD is a disturbance of identity in which the person perceives themselves as being a number of individuals all living in the same mind. These individuals are known as alters (alternate personalities).

Individual alters may or may not be aware of the others, thus the individuals take on the primary symptoms of amnesia. From their perspective this is known as “losing time”.

This also means that objects or new clothes may appear without them knowing where they have come from, or other people may recall conversations and times of which they have no memory.

A person with DID/MPD may also have many somatic (or physical) complaints.

eg:

  • Headaches, up to severe migraines
  • Abdominal pain
  • Chest pain
  • Vaginal or anal pain
  • Changes in vision
  • Choking sensations

They may experience depression, mood swings, suicidal tendencies, sleep disorders, panic attacks and self mutilation, such as cutting or burning themselves.

They can also suffer from flashbacks or reactions in which they seem to be reliving traumatic experiences as if trapped in some kind of ‘time warp’.

What Causes It?

DID/MPD ‘develops’ in childhood. It is the result of ongoing severe abuse (physical, emotional and/or sexual) or trauma. It is a highly creative survival technique that allows a child to escape from situations from which there is no physical escape by ‘going away’ inside and allowing ’someone else’ (another alter) to take over their place.

How Is It Diagnosed?

DID/MPD is diagnosed by the identification of at least two alter personalities who take control of the body. This kind of response to stress is called dissociation, and there are a number of evaluation tests that can measure the levels of dissociation a person uses. Along with the identification of alters, these tests will enable a therapist to make the diagnosis.

What Are The Main Different Types?

People with DID/MPD can have anything from three to hundreds of alters.

There are three main types within the disorder based on the causes.

Ritual/Satanic abuse - Estimates of 40-60% of DID/MPD is caused by Satanic religious cults. This condition is often deliberately induced by the cult to produce compliance and amnesia.

Childhood Trauma - Trauma such as death, war, medical trauma etc if ongoing can produce DID/MPD in a small percentage of cases (approximately 3%)

Childhood Neglect and Abuse- Ongoing physical, emotional and sexual abuse is the way to create DID/MPD. Unfortunately this kind of severe mistreatment of children is common enough to produce DID/MPD in at least 1.8% of the population.

Who Is At Risk?

Obviously the biggest risk factor is child abuse. However, an adult with DID/MPD may not remember any abuse and in fact may have long blank periods in their memories of childhood or sometimes no memory at all.

Implications

The prevalence of DID/MPD in the general population has been estimated at between 1-3%. This means that at least one child in every hundred is experiencing the severity of abuse and neglect that leads to the development of the disorder.

The only prevention for DID/MPD is the prevention of the abuse of children.

For their sakes - BREAK THE SILENCE

What Can Be Done?

The condition of DID/MPD is resolvable with two to seven years of psychotherapeutically based counselling. Unfortunately, in Australia it can be very difficult to access appropriate therapy and it is important, in fact vital, that the therapy be directly dealing with the multiplicity for it to be effective.

People with DID/MPD have an average of seven years in the mental health system and at least seven previous diagnoses before being correctly diagnosed.

Drug therapies have been found to be counter productive with the exception of seratonin reuptakes (Prosac, Arapax. Zoloft etc) which can be useful in controlling the symptoms of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (which used to be known as “shell shock” when first identified in wartime conditions). People with DID/MPD also suffer from PTSD. In fact it has been suggested that DID/MPD is itself a chronic form of PTSD.

Services Available

Very Little.

Individual psychotherapy - be careful to find someone familiar and preferably experienced in working with DID/MPD.

Useful Links:

Mental Illness Fellowship of South Australia Inc.

Mental Health Assoociation NSW Inc.

 

Written by phil on Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Tagged: DID, Dissociative Identity Disorder, MPD, Multiple Personality Disorder

 

2 comments about “Dissociative Identity Disorder”

  1. shannon.lavey Says:

    I am a young sufferer of ritual abuse. I have dissocative identity disorder. MY life is a constant battle to stay safe. I am wondering if there are other out there they would like to form a support group. I was born into a cult and tortured and abused systematically till i was 14 years old. I escaped but still run risk ofmbeing triggered and called back to my abusers. Life can be interesting too being multipule. shannon

    July 26th, 2008 at 1:10 pm
  2. Jane Says:

    Shannon,
    I only saw your message yesterday or I would have sent this information sooner. Just recently someone else asked about this and so I gathered some information for them.
    I am making an assumption that you are living in South Australia which is where our organisation is based. As you are probably well aware there is very little in the way of treatment available here but there is one organisation - the Janrua Foundation that specifically seeks to help ‘Any person who has experienced trauma (including child abuse) which affects their mental health, particularly those experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder or dissociative disorders’. They are based in Woodville in Adelaide, South Australia. Contact details: Ph: 8244 7850 Fax: 82447050 Email: frosp@bigpond.net.au Beverley Searle is the Director of the organisation.
    We also have two items in our library collection: The dissociative identity disorder sourcebook / by Deborah Bray Haddock and Attachment, trauma and multiplicity : Working with Dissociative Identity Disorder / by Valerie Sinason both of which are available for loan. Please call us here at DIRC 8236 0555 or contact us via the site if we can be of any assistance.
    Jane

    August 6th, 2008 at 10:11 am

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