捏造或诱发的疾病:肇事者的评估和管理方法

Christopher Bass, David P.H. Jones
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引用次数: 6

摘要

捏造或诱发疾病(FII)是一种罕见的虐待儿童形式,通常但不完全是由5岁以下儿童的母亲犯下的。发现和评估需要进行艰苦和详细的调查,在没有医疗、社会护理和其他记录的充分信息之前,不应尝试。疑似FII案件通常会导致家庭司法法院下令保护儿童,为他或她指定监护人,并委托评估。超过一半的犯罪者患有慢性躯体形式和/或人为障碍,通常与人格障碍共存。本文描述的病例特征表明,与儿童团聚是可能的。这些包括:(a)承认捏造;(b)与卫生和社会服务部门协同工作的能力;(c)停止向初级和三级保健服务提供躯体症状;(d)减少任何自残或滥用药物的频率;(e)与社会支持保持稳定的关系。描述了治疗阶段;在家庭制度的改变以及与制造者的伴侣和大家庭建立治疗联盟的情况下,已经证明了更好的结果。干预的时间框架必须考虑到儿童的发展需要。成功的结果取决于一个以上的精神卫生小组的协调努力,与儿童社会保健、初级保健和中心儿科的参与密切合作,以确保儿童的安全和未来的福祉。
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Fabricated or induced illness: assessment of perpetrators and approaches to management

Fabricated or induced illness (FII) is a rare form of child abuse that is usually, but not exclusively, perpetrated by mothers of children under 5 years of age. Detection and assessment require painstaking and detailed enquiry, and should not be attempted without full information from medical, social care, and other records. Suspected cases of FII often lead to family justice court orders to safeguard the child, appoint a guardian for him or her, and commission assessments. More than half of perpetrators have chronic somatoform and/or factitious disorders, often coexisting with a personality disorder. This article describes case characteristics suggesting that reunification with the child may be possible. These include: (a) acknowledgement of the fabrications; (b) an ability to work collaboratively with health and social services; (c) cessation of somatoform presentations to primary and tertiary care services; (d) reduction in frequency of any self-harming or substance misuse; (e) remaining in a stable relationship with social supports. Treatment phases are described; better outcome has been demonstrated where changes in the family system and a therapeutic alliance with the fabricator’s partner and extended family could be established. The time-frame for intervention must be sensitive to the developmental needs of the child. Successful outcome is dependent upon coordinated efforts by more than one mental health team, working closely with children’s social care, primary health care, and central paediatric involvement, to ensure the child’s safety and future well-being.

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Contents Editorial Board Mental illness, dangerousness and protecting society Personal autonomy and mental capacity The Mental Health Act and the Mental Capacity Act: untangling the relationship
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