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Diagnostic criteria in most widely used diagnostic systems (DSM IV and ICD 10) are similar. In both systems diagnostic criteria for psychiatric factitious disorder are identical to those for factitious disorder with physical signs and symptoms.
In both systems the diagnostic of factitious disorder supposes that the patient feign or produce the signs or symptoms with (the presumed) motivation of assuming the sick (or patient) role.
In addition, the DSM emphasizes the lack of external incentives and the ICD mentions that the disorder is often combined with marked disorders of personality and relationships.
Because of specificity of psychiatric diagnosis (i. e. that it entirely relies on statements made by the patient) those criteria, in the first place designed for factitious disorder with physical symptoms are difficult to use for factitious disorder with psychiatric presentation.
Based on proposals made by other authors and analysis of clinical characteristics of reported cases I suggest the following, more practical, criteria.
1. Severe disorder, usually incompatible with individuals maintaining steady employment, family ties and interpersonal relationships, with onset in early adulthood and following a generally chronic course.
2. Characteristics of symptomatology:
4. The external, material incentives are either absent or the symptomatology is very exaggerated considering the advantages. The distinction between material and psychological incentives is an important one for "care behavior" in others is an important incentive, always present in such cases.
We hope that this web site, providing an opportunity for discussion ("Comments" section) and standardized reporting of cases ("Any new case?" section) will contribute to refine the diagnostic criteria.