When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Malingering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malingering

    Malingering is the fabrication, feigning, or exaggeration of physical or psychological symptoms designed to achieve a desired outcome, such as personal gain, relief from duty or work, avoiding arrest, receiving medication, or mitigating prison sentencing. It presents a complex ethical dilemma within domains of society, including healthcare ...

  3. Primary and secondary gain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_and_secondary_gain

    If a patient's disease allows them to miss work, avoid military duty, obtain financial compensation, obtain drugs, avoid a jail sentence, etc., these would be examples of a secondary gain. For instance, an individual having household chores completed by someone else because they have stomach cramps would be a secondary gain.

  4. Malingering of post-traumatic stress disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malingering_of_post...

    The prevalence of malingering PTSD varies based on what one may be seeking. Differentiating between forensic and non-forensic evaluations, it has been found that malingering may be attempted in 15.7 percent of forensic evaluations and 7.4 percent of non-forensic evaluations. [6]

  5. Factitious disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factitious_disorder

    Malingering differs fundamentally from factitious disorders in that the malingerer simulates illness intending to obtain a material benefit or avoid an obligation or responsibility. Somatic symptom disorders , though also diagnoses of exclusion , are characterized by physical complaints that are not produced intentionally.

  6. Johnson said ‘malingering’ people should get back to work ...

    www.aol.com/johnson-said-malingering-people-back...

    More extracts from Professor Sir Patrick Vallance’s diaries have been shown at the inquiry.

  7. Ganser syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganser_syndrome

    For example, Bromberg (1986) has argued that the syndrome is not due to or related to mental illness, but rather a sort of defense against legal punishment. [10] Some see it as conscious lying, denial and repression, presenting Ganser syndrome symptoms as malingering instead of a dissociative or factitious disorder. [10]

  8. List of eponymous medical signs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_eponymous_medical...

    malingering due to simulated deafness: automatic rise in the loudness of a person's voice when they speak in noise Louvel's sign? internal medicine: deep venous thrombosis (needed) increased pain along vein with Valsalva; proximal pressure prevents this Lowenberg's sign: Robert I. Lowenberg: vascular medicine: deep vein thrombosis (needed)

  9. Oregon man arrested for cold case murder of car salesman

    www.aol.com/oregon-man-arrested-cold-case...

    An Oregon man was arrested and charged Thursday for the murder of a car dealership owner who disappeared three years ago, police said Monday. Murphy Henry, 54, was also charged with abuse of a ...