Published November 23, 2022 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Cognitive and Creative Therapy with Emotional Reactions and Anxiety in the Primary Treatment of Dissociative Identity Disorder

Description

Symptoms to manage stress, for example, there is the experience of having multiple people chatting or experiencing in the head at the same time as sadness, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts and tendencies (these people have their own background, voice, gender, and characteristics ). Depending on and approximately whether the other's or personality is present, various reactions to drugs or food may occur. Night terrors panic hallucinatory sounds in moments of extreme mental or physical exertion DID is often conditional. The primary treatment for dissociative identity disorder is long-term psychotherapy with the aim of deconstructing different personalities and integrating them into a single person. Other treatments include cognitive and creative therapy . While there are no medications that clearly treat this illness , antidepressants, anti-anxiety pills or tranquilizers can be used to help reduce the psychological symptoms associated with it. With appropriate treatment , Many people who suffer from DID experience improvements in their ability to function in their work and private lives. In 1988, Dell1 conducted a survey of clinicians to assess the reactions they saw from others because of their interest in dissociative identity disorder (DID), previously called multiple personality disorder. More than eighty percent of the 62 participants who treated patients with DID say they had "moderate to extreme" reactions from their colleagues. These responses included attempts by their patients to refuse hospitalization or to force their patients to be discharged, even patients who responders felt were at serious risk of committing suicide. Dell hypothesized that the emotional responses to the diagnosis of IPD were the result of the anxiety brought on by the "strange, disturbing clinical presentation"1 of the disorder, comparable to the emotional responses of some clinicians to psychiatric emergency patients.

Keywords: DID, Dissociative Identity Disorder, DID, Stress, Psychological Disorders

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