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Munchausen syndrome and its long-term impact on one Colorado Springs family


Photo by Fer Gregory / Shuttertock.com
Design by Dustin Glatz
Munchausen syndrome by proxy, also known as “factitious disorder imposed on another,” is defined by the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as “the intentional production or feigning of physical or psychological signs or symptoms in another person who is under the individual’s care.” It’s a disorder that first emerged, with both clinical and legal ramifications, in the 1970s.
One of the first people to be successfully prosecuted for murders ascribed to the disorder was Martha Woods, an Army wife who was convicted for killing her adopted son Paul Woods in 1972. Though only convicted of the one murder, it is believed that she had nine victims (only two of whom survived) across the United States, including Marlan Rash, an 18-month-old boy who died in Colorado Springs in 1964 while in Martha’s care. ....

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Scientists Find Link Between Bipolar Disorder and Neuroinflammation


Scientists Find Link Between Bipolar Disorder and Neuroinflammation
Alerts
A doctor looking at a picture of a human brain taken by a positron emission tomography scanner, also called PET scan, on Jan. 9, 2019, at the Regional and University Hospital Center of Brest in France.
Photo: Fred Tanneau (Getty Images)
Scientists may be closer to understanding how the brain can function differently in people who have bipolar disorder. In a new study, researchers say they’ve found evidence that certain brain cells trigger inflammation more easily in those who have bipolar disorder, and that these wayward cells can be linked to decreased neural activity that could be harmful to our mental health. ....

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Implicit Racial Bias Impacts Psychiatric Diagnosis and Treatment, Study Finds


Implicit Racial Bias Impacts Psychiatric Diagnosis and Treatment, Study Finds
Researchers find that psychiatric diagnosis and treatment planning are susceptible to unconscious racial bias.
A new study in
Academic Psychiatry investigates the relationship between racial bias among psychiatrists and medical students in the US and the effects on diagnosis and treatment. The study, conducted by Amalia Londono Tobon from the Yale University School of Medicine and her colleagues, found rampant implicit racial bias among participants, which can have severe implications for their patients of color.
Tobon and colleagues measured the presence and strength of implicit associations and the relevance to how participants diagnose and treat patients and understand patient compliance. Implicit associations are unconscious, automatic, and non-deliberate judgments and thinking patterns that people might have about others. These could influence the quality of care they provide to pe ....

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Pamplin Media Group - Alleged two-time murderer not fit to stand trial, judge finds


Tangled diagnosis history
Brown s issues included schizophrenia, hallucinations and an apparent psychotic break in 2017 that led to him lose 41 pounds in prison.
The Oregon State Hospital concluded that Brown was faking or exaggerating his illness early on, became genuinely psychotic between July 2019 and September 2020, then recovered somewhat and again began malingering, or feigning his illness.
On Friday, Jan. 15, Judge Dailey cited state and defense witnesses to find that the state hospital s position was perplexing and not persuasive or credible, noting that four doctors with experience diagnosing and treating psychosis recognized Defendant as floridly psychotic upon meeting him in 2019 and did not believe him to be malingering. ....

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