Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD)
Dissociative identity disorder (DID) is a mental health illness in which persons have two or more distinct personalities. At different times, these identities control a person’s conduct. DID can induce memory lapses and other issues.
Causes
Trauma-related dissociative disorders are common. Children who have experienced long-term physical, sexual, or emotional abuse or, less frequently, a terrifying or extremely unpredictable family situation are more likely to develop these diseases.
During childhood, people’s identities are still developing. As a result, a youngster is better able than an adult to take a step back and view trauma as if it were occurring to someone else. A youngster who learns to dissociate in order to cope with a traumatic experience may use this coping mechanism throughout his or her life to cope with stressful situations.
Symptoms
- Memory loss (amnesia) of specific times, events, persons, and personal data
- Detachment from yourself and your feelings
- You have a warped and unreal perception of the people and things around you.
- Identity confusion
- Significant stress or difficulties in your relationships, employment, or other essential aspects of your life
- Inability to handle emotional or professional stress well
- Depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts and behaviors are just some of the mental health issues that people face.
Treatment
- Supportive therapy, including, if necessary, medication treatment for related symptoms
- When possible, psychotherapy aims for the long-term integration of identity states.
The ideal outcome of treatment for dissociative identity disorder is the integration of the identity states. Drugs are commonly used to treat depression, anxiety, impulsivity, and substance abuse, but they do not cure dissociation.
Psychotherapy is the mainstay of integration treatment. Treatment tries to foster cooperation and collaboration among the identities and to minimize symptoms in individuals who cannot or will not strive for integration.
Before assessing traumatic memories and exploring problematic identities and grounds for dissociations, psychotherapy must first stabilize patients and assure their safety. Some patients benefit from hospitalization, which provides them with ongoing assistance and monitoring while they work through traumatic memories. Therapists should be on the lookout for signs of revictimization in such individuals.
Hypnosis can help you access your identities, communicate with them, and stabilize and interpret them. Some therapists engage and communicate directly with dissociated identity states in an attempt to aid their integration.
Patients can be gradually desensitized to painful memories through modified exposure techniques, which are sometimes only tolerated in small chunks.
Therapy can move toward reconnecting, integrating, and restoring the patient’s alternate identities, relationships, and social functioning as the reasons for dissociations are addressed and worked through. During treatment, some integration happens on its own. Integration can be assisted by hypnotic suggestion and guided imagery, or it can be supported by negotiating and planning the union of the identities.
Patients who have been traumatized, especially as children, may expect more abuse during therapy and have complex transference reactions to their therapist. Effective psychotherapy requires the discussion of these understandable feelings.
Risk Factors
Trauma frequently causes DID as a psychological reaction, making it a significant risk factor, particularly in childhood. It includes:
- Physical abuse
- Sexual Abuse
- Neglect of emotions
- maltreatment of the mind
Other conditions can coexist with a dissociative identity disorder. This implies that a single cause could result in multiple mental health issues.
Other disorders that can coexist with DID are:
- Depression
- Addiction to substances
- PTS
- Eating disorder
- Anxiety
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder



