Wednesday, 25 January 2017

dissociative disorders

Dissociative disorders 

A dissociative disorder is a mental health condition that alters a person's sense of reality.


Someone with a dissociative disorder may have memory loss or may feel:
  • that their body or the world around them is unreal
  • uncertain about who they are
  • that they have many different identities

Most people affected by this disorder will have experienced a traumatic event during childhood. They 'dissociate', or switch off from reality, to cope with it.
 It can affect people at any age and is nothing to do with a head injury or underlying health condition – it's the result of the brain adapting to a difficult early life.
different types of dissociative disorders:
  1. dissociative amnesia - repeatedly have periods where they cannot remember information about themselves or about events in their past life. They may also forget a learnt talent or skill.
  2. Depersonalisation- means feeling detached from yourself, observing yourself and your feelings and thoughts as if they belong to someone else you are watching in a movie.
  3. Dissociative identity disorder, or 'multiple personality disorder', is the most extreme of the three types
  • .If you've been diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder, you may feel uncertain about who you are and struggle to define yourself. 
  • You may feel the presence of other identities, which may each have their own names, voices, personal histories and mannerisms. 

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