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Re: Re: Caught in the act

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Hey Annie, do you think stealing the dog's antibiotics and taking them

yourself would fit this disorder? Because I certainly caught my nada doing

that and she was smug and proud of herself and fought with me when I said

she shouldn't.

I always found that horrifying.

On Thu, Jan 27, 2011 at 10:27 AM, anuria67854 wrote:

>

>

> Yes: claiming that your child is ill or even creating illness or injury to

> your child in order to get attention and sympathy from doctors is called

> " Factitious Disorder by proxy " but is better known by its older name

> " Munchausen's By Proxy Syndrome " .

>

> According to the article I read, the current opinion in the psychological

> community is that these behaviors happen when the parent has psychopathic

> traits and histrionic traits. Statistically, its the mothers who do this.

> The mother craves attention for herself (histrionic) and feels no

> compunction about using or even harming her child to get the attention she

> craves (psychopathy.)

>

> " Factitious disorders are conditions in which a person *acts* as if he or

> she has an illness by deliberately producing, feigning, or exaggerating

> symptoms. Factitious disorder by proxy is a condition in which a person

> deliberately produces, feigns, or exaggerates symptoms in a person who is in

> their care.... People with this condition may produce symptoms by

> contaminating urine samples, taking hallucinogens, injecting themselves with

> bacteria to produce infections, and other such similar behaviour. People

> with this condition might be motivated to perpetrate factitious disorders

> either as a patient or by proxy as a caregiver to gain any variety of

> benefits including attention, nurturance, sympathy, and leniency that are

> unobtainable any other way. "

>

> -Annie

>

>

>

> > >

> >

> >

> > > The disturbing feature was that these were women (and a few men) who

> masqueraded as good parents, the sort who rushed their children to the

> emergency room when they had trouble breathing, and stood by them with

> fortitude and devotion while the doctors puzzled out what was wrong. They

> were conning; they could give the appearance of the concerned mom the minute

> a doctor or nurse walked in the room, enjoy the social prestige of a

> mysterious disease, the proximity to powerful

> > > medical professionals, they liked the attention and the drama—the wail

> of the sirens, the adrenalin rush of the emergency room

> > > (Brown, n.d.).

> >

> >

> > > -Annie

> > >

> >

>

>

>

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