Article summary of Feigned medical presentations by Granacher & Berry - Chapter
What is the difference between feigning and malingering?
In the medical context, the term feigning is used more broadly than malingering, and includes exaggeration, magnification, or faking of symptoms. Feigning can include unawareness of behavior for the production of simulated symptoms without clear evidence of external gain. Malingering is a conscious choice to intentionally exaggerate or fabricate a medical or psychological condition for external gain. Feigned presentations can be classified in three general domains, namely physical (somatic), cognitive, and psychological (emotional).
What types of malingering are there?
Three categories of malingering have been identified:
In pure malingering the person entirely fabricates a psychological or medical condition that does not exist and has never existed.
In partial malingering the person is exaggerating symptoms of a condition that actually exists.
False imputation refers to an individual ascribing symptoms to an unrelated cause. Here, the symptoms are genuine, only the source of the symptoms is in question.
Which differential diagnoses exist with regards to malingering?
When malingering is a clinical consideration, the following five conditions should be considered in the differential diagnosis:
Undetected physical pathology. Any person with unexplained physical complaints may actually have an illness that is not detected during an initial evaluation (or even with subsequent testing).
Somatization disorder. This refers to a pattern of recurring polysymptomatic somatic complaints resulting in medical treatment or impaired daily functioning.
Hypochondriasis. This refers to the preoccupation with the fear of having, or the idea that a person has, a serious disease based on the person’s misinterpretation of bodily symptoms.
Pain disorder (pain disorder with related psychological factors or pain disorder exclusively related to psychological factors).
Factitious disorder with predominantly physical signs and symptoms. This refers to a category of physical or psychological symptoms that are intentionally produced in order to assume the sick role, which the patient finds very gratifying.
How common are feigned medical presentations?
Almost any medical illness can be feigned or malingered. Some types of medical problems are more likely to be feigned or malingered than others, namely personal injury, disability, criminal injury, or medical matters. Within medical cases there are high percentages of probable malingering and symptom exaggeration. Malingering is often supported by evidence in severity or pattern of cognitive impairment inconsistent with the condition. There are also discrepancies among records, self-report, and observed behavior, and implausible self-reported symptoms in interviews. Finally there were implausible changes of test scores across repeated examinations and validity scales on objective personality tests.
How prevalent is physical feigning and malingering?
The prevalence rates of physical feigning and malingering vary and studies often have very few participants. To determine the base rates for physical medical malingering multiple factors are involved, such as the clinical setting, the individual practitioner, the practitioner's specialty, whether psychological measures are added to physical examination, and clinical patients versus examinees seeking compensation. The two discrepancies in self-presentation most frequently mentioned as suggestive of malingering involved muscular weakness in the examinations not seen in other personal activities and claimed disablement disproportionate to the objective physical findings.
How prevalent is cognitive feigning and malingering?
The most alleged neurocognitive impairment in a litigation setting is traumatic brain injury, with a combined rate of probable and definite malingered neurocognitive dysfunction of 54%. Examinations of traumatic brain injury in compensation-seeking circumstances should be looked at carefully, with attention paid to premorbid and postinjury psychological status, insufficient effort, and symptom exaggeration.
How prevalent is psychological feigning and malingering?
Different feigning measures and detection strategies should be used for each different domain of psychological feigning (malingered psychosis, malingered PTSD, feigned psychological impairment).
How can medical feigning and malingering be detected?
All cases of medical examination that include a significant incentive should include the services of a psychologist or a neuropsychologist to provide assessment of feigning/malingering. Motivation needs to be evaluated. Malingerers may complain of a mental, behavioral, or physical disorder (or all). The possibility of avoiding responsibility and/or getting a monetary award increases the likelihood of exaggeration and/or malingering. Nonspecific symptoms that are difficult to verify are often overrepresented (e.g. headache, lower back pain, vertigo).
There are no direct measurements of physical malingering available. Physicians will have to use fairly simple tests while performing a physical examination to detect symptom exaggeration/malingering.
Performance validity tests are very important when an examinee is claiming cognitive/neuropsychological deficits in a compensation-seeking context. Practitioners have multiple, well-validated procedures suitable for detection of such deficits, such as the Test of Memory Malingering, the Medical Symptom Validity Test, and the Word Memory Test.
The two most important measures for feigned mental disorders are the Miller Forensic Assessment of Symptoms Test and the second edition of the Structured Interview of Reported Symptoms.
Join with a free account for more service, or become a member for full access to exclusives and extra support of WorldSupporter >>
Contributions: posts
Spotlight: topics
Online access to all summaries, study notes en practice exams
- Check out: Register with JoHo WorldSupporter: starting page (EN)
- Check out: Aanmelden bij JoHo WorldSupporter - startpagina (NL)
How and why use WorldSupporter.org for your summaries and study assistance?
- For free use of many of the summaries and study aids provided or collected by your fellow students.
- For free use of many of the lecture and study group notes, exam questions and practice questions.
- For use of all exclusive summaries and study assistance for those who are member with JoHo WorldSupporter with online access
- For compiling your own materials and contributions with relevant study help
- For sharing and finding relevant and interesting summaries, documents, notes, blogs, tips, videos, discussions, activities, recipes, side jobs and more.
Using and finding summaries, notes and practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter
There are several ways to navigate the large amount of summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter.
- Use the summaries home pages for your study or field of study
- Use the check and search pages for summaries and study aids by field of study, subject or faculty
- Use and follow your (study) organization
- by using your own student organization as a starting point, and continuing to follow it, easily discover which study materials are relevant to you
- this option is only available through partner organizations
- Check or follow authors or other WorldSupporters
- Use the menu above each page to go to the main theme pages for summaries
- Theme pages can be found for international studies as well as Dutch studies
Do you want to share your summaries with JoHo WorldSupporter and its visitors?
- Check out: Why and how to add a WorldSupporter contributions
- JoHo members: JoHo WorldSupporter members can share content directly and have access to all content: Join JoHo and become a JoHo member
- Non-members: When you are not a member you do not have full access, but if you want to share your own content with others you can fill out the contact form
Quicklinks to fields of study for summaries and study assistance
Main summaries home pages:
- Business organization and economics - Communication and marketing -International relations and international organizations - IT, logistics and technology - Law and administration - Leisure, sports and tourism - Medicine and healthcare - Pedagogy and educational science - Psychology and behavioral sciences - Society, culture and arts - Statistics and research
- Summaries: the best textbooks summarized per field of study
- Summaries: the best scientific articles summarized per field of study
- Summaries: the best definitions, descriptions and lists of terms per field of study
- Exams: home page for exams, exam tips and study tips
Main study fields:
Business organization and economics, Communication & Marketing, Education & Pedagogic Sciences, International Relations and Politics, IT and Technology, Law & Administration, Medicine & Health Care, Nature & Environmental Sciences, Psychology and behavioral sciences, Science and academic Research, Society & Culture, Tourisme & Sports
Main study fields NL:
- Studies: Bedrijfskunde en economie, communicatie en marketing, geneeskunde en gezondheidszorg, internationale studies en betrekkingen, IT, Logistiek en technologie, maatschappij, cultuur en sociale studies, pedagogiek en onderwijskunde, rechten en bestuurskunde, statistiek, onderzoeksmethoden en SPSS
- Studie instellingen: Maatschappij: ISW in Utrecht - Pedagogiek: Groningen, Leiden , Utrecht - Psychologie: Amsterdam, Leiden, Nijmegen, Twente, Utrecht - Recht: Arresten en jurisprudentie, Groningen, Leiden
JoHo can really use your help! Check out the various student jobs here that match your studies, improve your competencies, strengthen your CV and contribute to a more tolerant world
1481 |
Add new contribution