“While professionals and patients can be blamed for 'believing' in an illness or having one, patients also report problems when they are believed. Some professionals, they commented, have worryingly simplistic ideas of 'integration'. Ignoring the separately named alters in effect offers a psychic death sentence rather than aiding integration. If anything it can create a compliant false-self 'main person' who answers to [his or] her name and keeps all other 'states' in silent terror internally.” TherapyIntegrationMisunderstandingDissociative Identity DisorderPsychotherapyAlter PersonalitiesAlter IdentitiesIatrogenic Harm Book:Attachment, Trauma and Multiplicity: Working with Dissociative Identity Disorder Source: Attachment, Trauma and Multiplicity: Working with Dissociative Identity Disorder
“CBT is a much publicised and debated psychotherapeutic intervention for ME/CFS….The premise that cognitive therapy (eg. changing ‘illness beliefs’) and graded activity can ‘reverse’ or cure this illness is not supported by post-intervention outcome data. In routine medical practice, CBT has not yielded clinically significant outcomes for patients with ME/CFS.” CfsChronic Fatigue SyndromeMyalgic EncephalomyelitisMe CfsCognitive Behavioral TherapyGraded Exercise TherapyInvisible Illness StigmaCbtIllness BeliefsGraded ExerciseIatrogenic Harm Author:Anthony Komaroff
“The story of Sybil is true, not fictional or fraudulent. One early commentator actually suggested that Sybil and Dr. Cornelia Wilbur, her treating psychiatrist, were a case of folie à deux, or shared psychosis (Victor, 1975). Having met Dr. Wilbur, listened to her presentations on multiple personality (now known as dissociative identity disorder), and read the many critiques and reviews of Sybil, I have concluded that Sybil was not iatrogenically created by Dr. Wilbur.” DenialFakeFraudDissociative Identity DisorderMultiple Personality DisorderDenial Of Child AbuseSybilIatrogenicSybil ExposedIatrogenic Harm Author:Philip M. Coons