2024-03-29T11:16:40Zhttps://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/oai/requestoai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/15032015-06-18T01:13:38Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Steele, Katherine H.
2005-10-07T16:37:10Z
2005-10-07T16:37:10Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1503
A conceptual model for abreactive work with multople personality and other dissociative disorders is presented. The context and process of abreaction are described. the model includes the following components: Providing safety and protection (preparation); eliciting dissociated aspects of the trauma (identification); alleviating the fixation point in existential crisis of the trauma (resolution); creating a gestalt with the dissociated aspects within reconstructed cognitive schema (assimilation); empowering the patient through the return of an internal locus of control, restoration of contiguous consciousness and memory, and assimilation of identity (application).
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 151-159 : A model for abreaction with MPD and other dissociative disorders
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/15042015-06-18T01:13:27Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Alvarado, Carlos S.
2005-10-07T16:37:41Z
2005-10-07T16:37:41Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1504
This paper reviews examples of state-specific psychophysiology in nineteenth century reports of dissociative disorders. These cases occurred in the context of rapid developments both in neurology and in the understanding of phenomena suggesting the possible influence of the mind, emotions, or psychological states on general health and specific bodily functions (e.g., the study of hypnosis and hysteria). It is argued that interest in such cases was part of a general concern with mind-body interactions. The explanations offered to account for these cases reflected different orientations to the mind-body problem prevalent during this era.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 160-168 : Dissociation and state-specific psychophysiology during the nineteenth century
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/14822015-06-18T01:12:18Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Graves, Stuart M.
2005-10-07T16:19:49Z
2005-10-07T16:19:49Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1482
This paper presents the author's experience with dissociative disorders and dissociative symptoms among 125 patients seen for ongoing pharmacologic treatment at a community mental health center. Eleven were found to have a diagnosable dissociative disorder, and 16 others to have marked dissociative symptoms. The nature of the dissociative symptoms is discussed, as are the implications of these findings, should they prove replicable.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 119-127: Dissociative disorders and dissociative symptoms at a community mental health center
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/15052015-06-18T01:13:23Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Ross, Colin A.
Heber, Sharon
Norton, G. Ron, 1941-
Anderson, Donna
Anderson, Geri
Barchet, Paul
2005-10-07T16:38:02Z
2005-10-07T16:38:02Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1505
The Dissociative Disorders Interview Schedule (DDIS), a structured interview, has been developed to make DSM-III diagnoses of the dissociative disorders, somatization disorder, major depressive episode, and borderline personality disorder, Additional items provide information about substance abuse, childhood physical and sexual abuse, and secondary features of multiple personality disorder. These items provide information useful in the differential diagnosis of
dissociative disorders. The DDIS has an overall inter-rater reliability of 0.68. For the diagnosis of multiple personality disorder it has a specifify of 100% and a sensitivity of 90%.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 169-189 : The dissociative disorders interview schedule: a structured interview
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/14912015-06-17T19:47:23Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Cohen, Barry M.
Cox, Carol Thayer
2005-10-07T16:29:14Z
2005-10-07T16:29:14Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1491
The authors organized the art productions of clients diagnosed as suffering multiple personality disorder into ten basic categories reflecting thematic, structural, and process elements. These categories were derived from the study of nearly two thousand pictures drawn over a period of nine years. Designed to aid therapists in the identification of multiplicity, these categories can also be used as a framework to help therapists understand the spontaneous artwork of multiples.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 132-137 : Breaking the code: identification of multiplicity through art productions
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/15012015-06-18T01:13:26Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Albini, Theresa K.
Pease, Terri E.
2005-10-07T16:36:22Z
2005-10-07T16:36:22Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1501
The authors hypothesize that multiple personality disorder is related to the processes that lead to the formation in children of a distinct and cohesive self. Three clinical propositions concerning MPD derived from this hypothesis are: first, multiple personality disorder should be
seen as a childhood disorder; second, cohesion of the self is best understood as a developmental achievement mediated by specific experiences in the early years of life; third, some dissociative disorders, including multiple personality disorder, are survivals of an earlier personality organization in which distinct centers of experience and initiative existed Within a single individual.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 144-150 : Normal and pathological dissociations of early childhood
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/14832015-06-17T19:47:26Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Martinez-Taboas, Alfonso, 1953-
2005-10-07T16:20:21Z
2005-10-07T16:20:21Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1483
A considerable number of cases of multiple personality disorder (MPD) have been reported by clinicians working in the continental United States of America (USA). However, there has never been a documentation of MPD in a Latin American country. Here I report three cases of Puerto Rican patients with MPD whose symptom profile and etiological background are strikingly similar to the ones reported in the USA. It is recommended that Latin American mental health professionals should become more aware of and clinically sensitive to this increasingly recognized conditions.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 128-131 : Preliminary observations on MPD in Puerto Rico
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/14782015-06-18T01:13:25Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
2005-10-07T16:17:41Z
2005-10-07T16:17:41Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1478
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 000 : Cover, table of contents
Other
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/14802015-06-18T01:12:40Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Kluft, Richard P., 1943-
2005-10-07T16:18:37Z
2005-10-07T16:18:37Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1480
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 117-118 : Editorial: Excerpts from the editor's notebook
Article
oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/14932015-06-17T19:46:47Zcom_1794_1129col_1794_1202
Adams, M. Ann
2005-10-07T16:31:00Z
2005-10-07T16:31:00Z
1989-09
0896-2863
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/1493
In the past, Internal Self Helpers (ISHs) of persons with multiple personality disorder (MPD) have been described by a small number of therapists. This study broadens the base of information relating to ISHs. Forty respondents who collectively had been therapists for a total of 690 MPD patients participated in the study. The findings of this study suggest that a) ISH occurrence within MPD clients is not uncommon; b) ISHs can be valuable assets in the therapeutic process; c) therapists differ in their explanations of and beliefs about ISHs, as well as the manner in which they relate to and utilise ISHs; d) ISHs are reported to be mostly knowledgeable, reliable, and helpful; e) ISHs demonstrate a wide variety of abilities; and f) while there is no one explanation regarding the etiology and nature of ISHs, therapists most commonly tend to describe ISHs as possessing unifying, centering, and protective functions within MPD persons.
en_US
Dissociation : Vol. 2, No. 3, p. 138-143 : Internal self helpers of persons with multiple personality disorder
Article