When the Mind Splits
Dissociative identity disorder affects
millions of people, most of whom are former child abuse victims. Why do some
psychologists doubt that the condition even exists?
By Sam Levin
....I
met Elyse a few weeks after she sent me an email, stating that she has was
trying to find a journalist to help her raise awareness about dissociative
identity disorder, or DID (pronounced D-I-D), a misunderstood and stigmatized
condition that is far more common than most people realize. Elyse was officially
diagnosed with DID two years ago at Stanford University Medical Center, but she
said she has had the condition for much longer.
"The majority of the
public knows little to no correct information about DID, and even those in the
professional field of psychology debate whether or not this disorder is even
real," Elyse wrote to me over the summer. "But it is. It is very, very real, and
so I am working hard to spread awareness."
Research has increasingly
demonstrated that DID is a trauma-based disorder that typically emerges among
people who have experienced childhood sexual or physical abuse. Dissociation
occurs when people mentally detach themselves from their surroundings, a common
coping mechanism for a child victim of abuse. When the abuse continues over a
period of time, that dissociation can become extreme and lead the victim to
develop distinct, dissociated parts of himself or herself that exist to
withstand the abuse.
Experts on DID say that roughly 1 percent of the
population suffers from the condition, making it as common as bipolar disorder
or schizophrenia.
....Every year, child protective service agencies in
the United States receive more than 3 million reports of child abuse. In 2012,
there were nearly 63,000 documented cases of child sexual abuse, according to US
Department of Health and Human Services data. And experts believe that the
number of cases reported and investigated represents just a small fraction of
the abuse and trauma that children suffer across the country.
"When they
are reported, they are not dealt with well," said David Spiegel, associate chair
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University School of Medicine
and an expert on dissociative identity disorder. Some research has suggested
that two-thirds of child trauma cases aren't reported, he said. "These children
have to live with it. How do you live with it? ... You act as though it isn't
happening or it's happening to somebody else that isn't you."
Cases
involving the most severe and disturbing trauma — prolonged physical and sexual
abuse by parents, other family members, or caregivers — are especially likely to
go unreported. And so children in these cases develop their own ways to survive.
"You can't run away. You can't fight it, so you go away in your head," explained
Bethany Brand, a clinical psychologist and professor of psychology at Towson
University in Maryland, who recently completed the world's largest study on the
treatment of dissociative disorders. "That makes it easier to disconnect from
the body in pain."
When a young mind repeatedly enters these dissociative
states in response to ongoing abuse, the coping mechanism can evolve into DID.
"It's an interesting paradox of sort of breaking apart, so that you don't
break," explained Janelle Salah, a Berkeley-based therapist who treats DID
patients.
....A 2006 Journal of Psychiatric Research study concluded that
1.5 percent of the general population has DID. And a 2011 epidemiological
overview of DID studies — which stated that "dissociative disorders constitute a
hidden and neglected public health problem" — said the disorder exists in 0.4 to
3.1 percent of the general population, and in roughly 5 percent of psychiatric
patients. That study also stated that dissociative patients are more likely to
report childhood psychological trauma than people suffering from any other
psychiatric disorder.
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/oakland/when-the-mind-splits/Content?oid=4109440&showFullText=true
http://goo.gl/S5bPf9
When The Mind Splits: Processing Dissociative Identity Disorder
Through Artby Sam Levin
In this week's cover story, I profiled
Elyse Winter-Volkova, a 21-year-old San Leandro woman who suffers from
dissociative identity disorder, the condition formerly known as multiple
personality disorder. Experts believe the disorder, also known as DID, affects
roughly 1 percent of the population and most often emerges in people who have
experienced severe childhood trauma, typically prolonged physical or sexual
abuse. One of the leading DID experts featured in my story is Bethany Brand, a
professor of psychology at Towson University in Maryland, who conducted the
world's largest study on the treatment of dissociative disorders. In addition to
discussing her extensive research with me, Brand helped connect me to two women
in Maryland who also have DID.....
DID most often develops as a highly
complex coping mechanism in the face of intense abuse and trauma, meaning a
child mentally detaches from his or her surroundings, and eventually develops
distinct, dissociated parts (or personalities) that exist to withstand the
abuse. The challenge for people living with DID is to develop a functional
system of communication between different personalities or identities (sometimes
called "alters"), with some sufferers working toward "integration" — that is,
the fusion of different identities into one. While integration is not always the
ultimate goal for people with DID, Elise told me that she is working toward
integration — an incredibly difficult process of trying to merge different parts
of herself that carry different memories and perspective on her past abuse. "I
would like to come back together as much as possible," she said....
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/CultureSpyBlog/archives/2014/10/29/when-the-mind-splits-processing-dissociative-identity-disorder-through-art
http://goo.gl/VmtQZ2
When the Mind Splits
from East Bay Express Elyse
Winter-Volkova has been diagnosed with dissociative identity disorder, but
instead of hiding it, she openly talks about her condition online, with the
people in her life, and as a guest lecturer in college psychology classes. She
hopes to raise awareness and advocate for greater acceptance of people with
mental illnesses.
http://vimeo.com/110367678Dissociative
identity disorder (formerly called Multiple Personality Disorder or MPD) is
defined in the DSM-IV-TR as the presence of two or more personality states or
distinct identities that repeatedly take control of one’s behavior. The patient
has an inability to recall personal information. The extent of this lack of
recall is too great to be explained by normal forgetfulness. The disorder cannot
be due to the direct physical effects of a general medical condition or
substance.
http://childabusewiki.org/index.php?title=Dissociative_Identity_Disorder
http://goo.gl/HdPL1