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The term you're looking for is "malingering." It refers to the intentional fabrication or exaggeration of physical or psychological symptoms for personal gain, such as avoiding work or obtaining financial benefits. Malingering is distinct from other psychological disorders, as it involves a clear motivation for the deceptive behavior.
Malingering
Factitious is the intentional production of physical or psychological symptoms in order to be diagnosed as ill (making up some symptoms that are not existed, with the aim of being diagnosed as ill). Malingering has more to do with exaggeration of symptoms, meaning that the symptoms are there but not as the patient is describing them. Both have a common feature in which the intention is to gain a reward, avoid duties or financial compensation. Factitious does not bring any external reward but Malingering does.
This term is called "malingering". It involves feigning illness or injury for personal gain or to avoid responsibilities. It is not a genuine illness or condition.
Faking illness to avoid work is called malingering. It comes from the French word, malingre which means sickly. Someone who does this is called a malingerer.
A hypochondriac is a person who believes that he or she has illness that he or she doesn't actually have (or more commonly, has illnesses but exaggerates their severity); a psychosomatic illness is an actual illness of the body that has a mental cause (a person who truly considers himself or herself to be sick can easily develop actual symptoms of that imagined disease) and malingering involves lying about one's health in order to have an excuse for not doing work that one should be doing. So, all of these things involve some form of illness, whether claimed, imagined, or actually experienced, that arises from the mind, rather than from a more usual cause such as an infection, etc.
Malingerers are people who fake and exaggerate symptoms of medical illnesses, usually for secondary gain e.g. Personal Injury Claims.
Somatoform disorders are mental disorders in which physical symptoms cannot be fully explained by a known physical illness or injury. These disorders are characterized by the presence of physical symptoms that suggest a medical condition, but cannot be traced back to a specific medical cause. Examples include somatization disorder, conversion disorder, and illness anxiety disorder.
The child may be exhibiting somatic symptom disorder, a mental health condition where physical symptoms are experienced due to psychological distress. It is important for the child to receive proper evaluation and support from mental health professionals.
Usually characterized by the following symptoms: -Shortness of breath that worsens with physical activity -A high pitched wheezing sound when you breath -Feeling the need to gasp for breath -Flushed complexion -A dry cough
It would be characterized as a Panic Attack
On the one hand, the doctor does not want to overlook a treatable disease. On the other hand, he or she does not want to continue ordering tests and treatments if the symptoms are faked