Dissociative Identity Disorder/Multiple Personality Disorder

Dissociative Identity Disorder/Multiple Personality Disorder

A disorder in which a person's identity dissociates, or fragments, creating additional, distinct identities that exist independently of each other within the same person.

Persons with dissociative identity disorder (DID) adopt one or more distinct identities. Each identity or personality is distinct from the other(s) in specific ways. There are cases in which a person will have as many as 100 or more identities, while some people only exhibit the presence of one or two. ("Co-presence" is the term used to describe the situation that exists when two or more personalities are simultaneously present with or without knowledge of each other's existence or current presence.)

Prior to the publication of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder-IV (DSM-IV), dissociative identity disorder was referred to as multiple personality disorder (MPD); the birth personality was referred to as the original personality, and the condition was referred to as "split personality." With the publication of DSM-IV, these terms are now considered imprecise and are no longer used. The DSM-IV lists four criteria for diagnosing someone with dissociative identity disorder:

  • The presence of two or more distinct "identities or personality states;"
  • At least two personalities must take control of the person's identity on a regular basis;
  • Exhibits aspects of amnesia, that is, the person forgets routine personal information;
  • The condition must not have been caused by "direct physiological effects," such as drug abuse or head trauma.

Persons with DID usually have one personality that controls the body and its behavior. Psychiatrists refer to this personality as the "host." This is generally not the person's original personality or birth personality. The host is often initially unaware of the other identities and typically loses time when they appear. The host is the identity that most often initiates treatment, usually after developing symptoms, such as depression. The personality that seeks treatment—whether the host or not—is referred to as the "presenting personality."

The DSM-IV uses the term "alter" to describe the distinct identities or personality states that the client or patient with DID experiences. To be classified as a "personality state," the following conditions must be met: a consistent and ongoing set of response patterns to given stimuli; a significant confluent history; a range of emotions available (anger, sadness, joy, and so on); a range of intensity of affect for each emotion (for example, anger ranging from neutrality to frustration and irritation to anger and rage).

Psychiatrists refer to the phase of transition between alters as the "switch." The number of alters in any given case can vary widely. Alters are often of different genders, i.e., men can have female alters and women can have male. A 1986 study found that in 37% of patients diagnosed with then-MPD, alters demonstrated different handedness from the host. The physical changes that occur in a switch between alters is one of the most difficult aspects of dissociative identity disorder for psychiatrists to understand. People assume whole new physical postures, voices, and vocabularies.


Advertisement
Advertisement