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Jeffrey E. Hansen, Ph.D.
Clinical Director
Kevin Lussier
I highly recommend this facility, the staff truly care. Even long after Iโve graduated treatment, Iโm still connected. Helping me through all stages of my growth. I didnโt just go to treatment, I found a new way to live. Iโm living my best life and my journey has just begun. Iโm forever grateful.
After years of struggling with substance abuse and deep-rooted trauma, my loved one was lost, hopeless, and disconnected from both himself and God. AnchorPoint not only helped him find recovery, but also led him back to faith and a completely new way of living. The compassion, patience, and dedication of the team is unlike anything we’ve experienced. They didn’t just treat symptoms, they helped him heal from the inside out. Today he’s thriving, living a healthy spiritually grounded lifestyle. We are forever grateful for the role AnchorPoint played in this transformation.
It is such a welcoming facility with all the comforts of home, an excellent location to recover and be transformed by the faith-based Christian program it offers for healing and restoration!
You may have encountered Munchausen syndrome (now known as Factitious Disorder) before in Netflix series or movies, often portrayed as patients faking illness for attention, undergoing unnecessary surgeries, or manipulating loved ones with fabricated symptoms. These depictions highlight a real clinical disorder.
Factitious disorder, however, drives individuals to become the “sick role” through deception motivated by psychological needs, such as emotional care, qualifying it as a diagnosable psychiatric condition in the DSM-5 [1].
Malingering, on the other hand, involves the deliberate production or exaggeration of symptoms for tangible external gains, like financial compensation or evading responsibilities, and is not classified as a mental disorder. Read on to understand their differences, diagnostic challenges, and implications for treatment.
Factitious disorder is an official mental illness classified as a somatic symptom disorder (also called somatoform disorder, and formerly known as Munchausen). People with this disorder often exaggerate or lie about having, or the severity of, their medical or psychiatric symptoms. Factitious disorder is rare, with estimates ranging from 0.2-1% in hospital settings and around 1.3% in primary care settings [1].
There are two primary kinds of factitious disorders:
People with factitious disorders also try to fake diagnostic test results. For example, they might falsify urine tests by swapping out urine samples or taking medications they know will change the results of a blood test.
Malingering is the intentional fabrication or exaggeration of symptoms specifically for external incentives such as avoiding work or legal responsibilities, financial gain, or obtaining drugs.
It is not an official mental health disorder, but rather a behavioral issue sometimes found in individuals with mental health disorders such as borderline personality disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and dissociative disorders.
Common examples of malingering include:
Itโs difficult to recognize someone who is malingering versus someone with a factitious disorder, as they may present similarly, but the motivations and intentions of their behaviors are different.
Malingering isnโt an official diagnosis and is often directly related to incentives or rewards such as money, drugs, or leave from work. Signs of malingering can include:
People with factitious disorders intentionally produce or exaggerate symptoms, but canโt control their behavior and are not doing it for an external incentive. Their motive is due to underlying psychological needs rather than personal gain. It is an official diagnosis in the DSM-5, and the criteria include [2]:
| Feature | Malingering | Factitious Disorder |
| Motivation | External rewards (financial, avoiding legal consequences) | Internal psychological need, such as attention or care (no external rewards) |
| In DSM-5? | Not an official mental health disorder | Classified as a Somatic Symptom Disorder in the DSM-5 are |
| Control | Voluntary and fully conscious behavior | Conscious but compulsive, and often lack the control to stop the behaviors |
| Behavior | Avoids professional tests or treatment | Accepts and desires invasive procedures |
| Treatment | Confrontation, remove incentives | Psychotherapy, CBT, |
| Examples | Faking an injury for external reward like financial gain | Self-inducing symptoms or faking a urine test for hospitalization |
Malingering and factitious disorder require different approaches due to their varying motivations and classifications. Malingering, being intentional for external gain, focuses on detection and incentive management rather than therapy. Factitious disorder, a psychiatric condition, is treated with psychotherapy to address underlying psychological needs.
At AnchorPoint, men receive tailored mental health and addiction support through Christ-centered programs addressing these challenges head-on. Specialized therapies like CBT, group sessions, and equine-assisted therapy address personality disorders, maladaptive behaviors, and co-occurring issues, fostering genuine vulnerability and lasting recovery.ย
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