Munchausen syndrome

Munchausen syndrome

About Munchausen syndrome

Munchausen syndrome (also known as factitious disorder) is a rare type of mental disorder in which a person fakes illness. The person may lie about symptoms, make themselves appear sick, or make themselves purposely unwell. This type of mental disorder is most often seen in young adults and is considered a type of self-harm.

A person with Munchausen syndrome can be very convincing, which can result in doctors providing unnecessary treatment, such as medication or surgery.

A person with Munchausen syndrome doesn’t pretend to be ill for personal gain, such as prescription medications or money. Instead, the person is driven to behave the way they do for complex psychological reasons, including a strong desire for attention and sympathy.

Often people with Munchausen syndrome have experienced childhood trauma.

Symptoms of Munchausen syndrome

A person with Munchausen syndrome gains intense satisfaction from the attention associated with playing the ill patient. Signs and symptoms that may suggest Munchausen syndrome include:

a spectacular medical history that includes many tests, medical procedures and operations

an odd collection of seemingly unrelated symptoms

a lack of conclusive results despite intense medical investigations

new symptoms that appear after medical tests prove negative

extensive medical knowledge of many different illnesses

frequently visiting many different doctors, sometimes in other states or territories

frequent presentation at emergency departments, usually at different hospitals

requests for invasive medical procedures or surgeries

failure to improve despite medical treatment, including relapsing for unknown reasons.

Common presentations of Munchausen syndrome

A person with Munchausen syndrome may convince doctors in many ways. For example, they may:

pretend to be in pain

exaggerate symptoms

fake symptoms, including psychological symptoms

poison themselves with chemicals

infect themselves with unclean substances

tamper with diagnostic tests – for example, contaminate a urine sample with sugar or blood

interfere with a medical condition so that recovery isn’t possible – for example, repeatedly open or contaminate a skin wound or not take prescribed medication

ignore a genuine medical problem until it becomes serious.

Common complications of Munchausen syndrome

A person with Munchausen syndrome is at risk of many complications including:

side effects from prescription medicines, including overdose

complications from poisoning or self-harm practices

complications from medical procedures or surgeries

death from self-harm or complications of medical intervention.

Risk factors for Munchausen syndrome

Some people may have a higher risk of developing Munchausen syndrome than others. Risk factors may include:

chronic illness during childhood – the person may have received a lot of attention because of their illness

chronic illness of a significant family member when the person was a child

self-esteem or identity problems

relationship problems

difficulty distinguishing reality from fantasy

ability to lie and manipulate

a history of mental problems such as

depression

, hallucinations or

post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

the need to blame personal failures on external factors, such as illness.

Diagnosis of Munchausen syndrome

Diagnosis is difficult because a range of legitimate physical and mental illnesses must be ruled out first. To complicate matters further, a person with Munchausen syndrome tends to seek help from various health care providers to avoid ‘tipping off’ any one doctor. Diagnosis, if it happens at all, may depend on abstract concepts such as:

The person’s symptoms don’t make sense when compared with the test results.

The person is unusually eager to undergo invasive medical procedures and operations.

The person doesn’t respond to treatments in a predictable fashion.

Other people in the patient’s life don’t confirm the person’s symptoms.

Treatment of Munchausen syndrome

Treatment aims to manage rather than cure the condition, but is rarely successful. Recovery tends to be slow or non-existent. Treatment options may include:

Medications to treat associated mental health illnesses such as depression or anxiety. Unfortunately, a person with Munchausen syndrome may misuse prescription drugs to provoke symptoms for further medical intervention.

Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT)

may help to change the person’s beliefs and actions. However, it is unlikely that someone with Munchausen syndrome would admit to falsifying symptoms, which can make progress difficult. Some people with Munchausen syndrome flatly refuse psychiatric help.

Avoiding unnecessary tests and surgeries is important to reduce the risk of complications. This can be aided by encouraging the person to go to only one primary care doctor. However, a person with Munchausen syndrome is likely to move on to other doctors and start again.

Munchausen syndrome by proxy

Munchausen syndrome by proxy (MBP) was the term previously used for a rare but serious form of abuse where a person either fakes or produces symptoms in someone else, usually their child. In Australia, MBP is now known as ‘fabricated or induced illness by carers’ (FIIC), to distinguish it from Munchausen syndrome. In Australia, FIIC is considered child or victim abuse, rather than a mental health condition.

In cases of FIIC, a carer may deliberately poison or harm a child to procure unnecessary tests and medical procedures.

The most common form of abuse appears to be apnoea (stopping breathing). The child may be revived by ambulance officers and taken to hospital, where all tests prove negative. Sometimes the child doesn’t survive the carer-induced apnoea.

FIIC is very rare, with estimates suggesting that between 15 and 24 cases occur in Australia every year. The mother is the perpetrator in most cases. However, this is thought to reflect the high number of women who take on the role of primary caregiver.

Where to get help

Your

GP

External Link

– for information and referral

Mental Health Foundation

Australia

External Link

Tel. National Mental Health Helpline

1300 MHF AUS (643 287)

Australian Psychological

Society

External Link

Tel.

1800 333 497

Mental Health Carers

Australia

External Link

(formerly ARAFMI) Tel.

1300 554 660

Child Protection Crisis

Line

External Link

(24 hrs, 7 days a week) Tel.

13 12 78

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