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What is a Peregrinating patient?

What is a Peregrinating patient?

In Munchausen’s, or factitious disorder, patients present with the unconscious production of somatic symptoms and are prone to traveling long distances to seek care from new providers. In this context, peregrination – derived from the Latin peregrinating, “to travel abroad” – was used to describe a patient’s traveling.

What is the prognosis of Munchausen syndrome?

The prognosis for patients with Munchausen’s syndrome appears to be poor; flexible and creative approaches that emphasize consistency of care and regular outpatient psychiatric treatment have had the greatest success.

What is factitious disorder?

Factitious disorder is a serious mental disorder in which someone deceives others by appearing sick, by purposely getting sick or by self-injury. Factitious disorder also can happen when family members or caregivers falsely present others, such as children, as being ill, injured or impaired.

Is fastidiousness an illness?

Factitious disorder is considered a mental illness. It’s associated with severe emotional difficulties and patients’ likelihood of harming themselves by continuing to produce more symptoms, resulting in getting themselves unnecessary procedures and surgeries.

How does Munchausen syndrome start?

Although there is no specific cause for Munchausen syndrome, risk factors for the disorder tend to be psychological, like having borderline or antisocial personality symptoms or a grudge against the medical profession and society, like having a personal or family history of serious illness or a history of neglect.

What is Munchausen?

Munchausen’s syndrome is a psychological disorder where someone pretends to be ill or deliberately produces symptoms of illness in themselves. Their main intention is to assume the “sick role” so that people care for them and they are the centre of attention.

How do you deal with malingering patients?

The more advisable approach is to confront the person indirectly by remarking that the objective findings do not meet the physician’s objective criteria for diagnosis. Allow the person who is malingering the opportunity to save face.

How can you tell if someone has Munchausen syndrome?

Signs and symptoms of Munchausen syndrome may include, dramatic medical history of serious illness, often with inconsistent details of the problem, symptoms that fit a diagnosis too perfectly or lack of signs that go with symptoms (for example, no sign of dehydration yet the person complains of diarrhea and vomiting).

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Ruth Doyle