Malingering and Illness Deception

Malingering and Illness Deception

by David Oakley (Editor), Christopher Bass (Editor), PeterHalligan (Editor)

Synopsis

Despite a rich and turbulent history spanning several centuries, malingering continues to be a controversial and neglected clinical condition that has significant implications for medical, social, legal and insurance interests. Estimates of malingering - the wilful, intentional attempt to simulate or exaggerate illness in the pursuit of a consciously desired end - vary greatly, despite the fact that malingering is believed to contribute substantially to fraudulent health care and social welfare costs. There is little consensus about what would constitute a coherent assessment of malingering, and base rates have been difficult to establish. Malingering remains a difficult attribution to make not least since it falls outside the remit of the formal psychiatric classifications. Labelling a person as a malingerer however, has significant medico-legal, personal and economic ramifications for both subject and accuser. Viewed in this way, malingering is not so much illness behaviour in search of a disease, as the manifestation of a conflict between personal and social values. The aim of this book is to effect an integration of the different medical, forensic, neuropsychological, legal and social perspectives. The book provides an overview of progress in disparate fields relevant to the subject, including how recent social and neuroscience findings regarding volition, intentional states and theory of mind may have implications for informing detection, management and ultimately its explanation.

$126.07

Quantity

10 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 384
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Published: 02 Oct 2003

ISBN 10: 0198515545
ISBN 13: 9780198515548
Book Overview: Draws together important findings from the many fields touched by malingering

Media Reviews
. . . [this book] handles a difficult, and emotive, matter with masterful neutrality and objectivity. The theoretical concepts are well explained and research data is allowed to speak for itself . . . important reading for all practitioners who are called upon to make medical judgements which influence a patient's access to an illness entitlement: for example, insurance claims, sickness certification or pensions assessments. * Primary Care Psychiatry, Vol 9, No 3 *
. . . an excellent theoretical overview of malingering. * Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology, Vol 15, No 2 *
. . . this is an invaluable attempt to define the conceptual framework for formal study of medical malingering. In contrast to the reductionist science which has dominated science for the last 50 years, this will inform the Art of medicine . . . I hope many of you will obtain this fascinating book. * Journal of Neurology, Vol 251, No 3 *