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Editors
Note: Munchausen syndrome is a condition where a person fakes an illness or
disease mainly to get attention from with the medical profession or from their
family and friends. Sometimes it is done to obtain sympathy, to act out anger
or even to control the behavior of others. It is not common but it happens
occasionally. Now it is happening on the internet.
When you discuss a condition with a person in a
chat room or reply to questions and comments on a message board, you may be
communicating with a person who is just faking the problem. (This is
important to keep in mind.) But how would you know? That person may also be
playing several roles in the chat room or message board. They have simplified
the deception by taking to the internet rather than attending a hospital
emergency room or doctor's office.
The following article by Marc D. Feldman MD,
who has followed patients with this condition over the years, gives tips for
recognizing this syndrome on the Net.
Munchausen by Internet: Faking Illness Online
by Marc D. Feldman, M.D
Online Support for People with Illness - The Internet is a medium of
choice for millions of people who need health-related information. Medical
websites have multiplied exponentially over the past several years. Thousands
of virtual support groups have sprung up for those suffering from particular
illnesses. Whether formatted as chat rooms, as newsgroups, or in other ways,
they offer patients and families the chance to share their hopes, fears, and
knowledge with others experiencing life as they are. These online groups can
counter isolation and serve as bastions of understanding, deep concern, and
even affection. Unfortunately, cyberspace resources are sometimes deliberately misused by
people intent on deceiving others. False product claims in spam are perhaps the
best-known example. But even in the relative intimacy of health support groups,
individuals may choose to mislead others by pretending to have illnesses they
do not. They divert the attention of the group toward their feigned battles
with cancer, multiple sclerosis, anorexia nervosa, or other ailments. The
eventual discovery of the deceptions can be devastating. One group member
called it "emotional rape" to have cared so deeply about a person who
lied to her and others from his first post on. Munchausen by Internet - For decades, physicians have known about
so-called factitious disorder, better known in its severe form as Munchausen
syndrome (Feldman Ford, 1995). Here, people willfully fake or produce illness
to command attention, obtain lenience, act out anger, or control others. Though
feeling well, they may bound into hospitals, crying out or clutching their
chests with dramatic flair. Once admitted, they send the staff on one medical
goose chase after another. If suspicions are raised or the ruse is uncovered,
they quickly move on to a new hospital, town, state, or in the worst cases
country. Like traveling performers, they simply play their role again. I
coined the terms "virtual factitious disorder" (Feldman, Bibby,
Crites, 1998) and "Munchausen by Internet" (Feldman, 2000) to refer
to people who simplify this "real-life" process by carrying out their
deceptions online. Instead of seeking care at numerous hospitals, they gain new
audiences merely by clicking from one support group to another. Under the guise
of illness, they can also join multiple groups simultaneously. Using different
names and accounts, they can even sign on to one group as a stricken patient,
his frantic mother, and his distraught son all to make the ruse utterly
convincing. Clues to Detection of False Claims - Based on experience with two
dozen cases of Munchausen by Internet, I have arrived at a list of clues to the
detection of factititous Internet claims. The most important follow:
- the posts consistently duplicate material in other posts, in books, or on
health-related websites;
- the characteristics of the supposed illness emerge as caricatures;
- near-fatal bouts of illness alternate with miraculous recoveries;
- claims are fantastic, contradicted by subsequent posts, or flatly
disproved;
- there are continual dramatic events in the person's life, especially when
other group members have become the focus of attention;
- there is feigned blitheness about crises (e.g., going into septic shock)
that will predictably attract immediate attention;
- others apparently posting on behalf of the individual (e.g., family
members, friends) have identical patterns of writing.
Lessons - Perhaps the most important lesson is that, while most
people visiting support groups are honest, all members must balance empathy
with circumspection. Group members should be especially careful about basing
their own health care decisions on uncorroborated information supplied in
groups. When Munchausen by Internet seems likely, it is best to have a small
number of established members gently, empathically, and privately question the
author of the dubious posts. Even though the typical response is vehement
denial regardless of the strength of the evidence, the author typically will
eventually disappear from the group. Remaining members may need to enlist help
in processing their feelings, ending any bickering or blaming, and refocusing
the group on its original laudable goal. References: Feldman, M.D. (2000): Munchausen by Internet: detecting
factitious illness and crisis on the Internet. Southern Journal of Medicine,
93, 669-672
Feldman, M.D., Bibby, M., Crites, S.D. (1998): "Virtual" factitious
disorders and Munchausen
by proxy. Western Journal of Medicine, 168, 537-539
Feldman, M.D., Ford, C.V. (1995): Patient or Pretender: Inside the Strange
World of Factitious Disorders. New York, John Wiley Sons
more on: people who fake it online
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