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A person can have multiple personalities. It is the person who has the disorder and not the personalities who have the disorder.
A person with multiple personalities is commonly referred to as having Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). This is a condition where an individual's identity is fragmented into two or more distinct personality states.
dissociative identity disorder... previously known as multiple personality disorder
It is a disorder in which a person takes on different personalities. It is different from Multiple Personality Disorder because in MPD, the person has no idea that he or she is taking on more than one personality.
The acronym MPD stand for Multiple Personality Disorder, which is a condition of the brain where a person displays multiple, distinct identities or personalities.
bipolar disorder, mood disorder, symptoms are extremecycles of high and low moodschizophrenia, thought disorder, symptoms are hallucinations and delusionsmultiple personality disorder or dissociative identity disorder, dissociation disorder, symptoms are changes in identity and personality
Eve. She has a book and a film called The Three Faces of Eve. In the end she had 22 personalities.
The biggest danger of Dissociative Identity Disorder (formerly Multiple Personality Disorder) is having one or more personalities unaware of other personalities and their actions. People with DID cannot recall important personal information. This is not due to forgetfulness or traumatic brain injury. If one or more of the personalities are aggressive and/or hostile, this can cause anything from embarrassment to imprisonment for the other personalities. Frequent gaps in memory occur, both for recent and past memory. There may be visual or auditory hallucinations. One personality may "wake up" and not recall where he/she is or how he/she got there. Other disorders may occur in conjunction with DID. PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) occurs in quite a few people with DID. Other disorders may include Mood Disorder, Substance-Related Disorder, Sexual Disorder, Eating Disorder, Sleep Disorder, and Borderline Personality Disorder.
Multiple Personality Disorder or Dissociative Identity Disorder. These are both the same thing they just changed it.
You are confusing dissociative identity disorder, also known as multiple personality disorder, with schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is a disorder in which the person suffering loses touch with reality. Dissociative identity disorder is a disorder in which the person suffering believes him or herself to have multiple personalities coexisting in one body. See the related questions for a more in-depth exploration of what the two illnesses are. As the 'personalities' are not real people, a threat of death to them would not be viewed as a hostage situation.
The book "Split personalities" was written by the author Janet Rowley. It explores the nature of multiple personality disorder and follows the story of a woman named Claudia who struggles with this condition.
Families of individuals with multiple personality disorder may experience confusion, stress, and emotional upheaval as they navigate the complexities of the disorder. They may struggle to understand and support their loved one as they switch between different personalities. Communication and relationships within the family can also be strained as they try to cope with the challenges of the disorder.