Articles: Medical Topics
Malingering: Can it be detected?
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One way of defining a good patient
or plaintiff is a person who:
- Presents with objective signs
and symptoms of a treatable injury.
- Makes no emotional demands upon
the physician or attorney, such as uncomfortable displays of
excessive emotion.
- Cooperates with the treatment
process.
- Upon getting well, displays gratitude
for the help received.
Peopl e who are accused
of malingering after an injury do not meet the above criteria.
When the strong words of "This patient is a malingerer"
appear in a report prepared by the physician who performed
the independent medical exam, the medical legal system is
on the alert. What is malingering and how common is it? Can
it be detected?
Malingering is intentional deceptive
behavior, not a medical or psychiatric disorder. The diagnosis
of malingering rests upon the identification of an external
or "secondary" gain being present as the main
motivation for the behavior. In other words, what does the
person hope to gain?
Common motivating factors are:
- Avoidance of going to jail
or release from jail, avoidance of work or family responsibility.
- Desire to obtain narcotics.
- Desire to be awarded money
in litigation.
- Need for attention.
Related disorders
Attorneys
may encounter terms in IME
reports or those of treating doctors, which mention psychological
disorders that are different from malingering.
Factitious disorder
/ Munchausen syndrome by proxy: This is a deliberate
effort to produce physical or psychological symptoms in order
to gain attention from the sick role. This individual will
undergo painful treatment and surgery in order to obtain medical
attention. The patient consciously produces symptoms, although
the motivation to do so is unconscious. Occasionally the symptoms
will be aimed at obtaining narcotics, but more commonly they
are directed towards getting care and attention through hospitalization.
Financial gain is not a motivating factor in this disorder.
When a person creates illness or injury in another person,
such as a mother making a child sick, this is Munchausen syndrome
by proxy.
Hypochondriasis:
The patient who is excessively preoccupied with bodily sensations
or has unreasonable fears of illness is a hypochondriac. It
is usually limited to one disease. They are usually reassured
when they are given a label to which they feel entitled. Chronic
fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia syndrome have been recently
used, and sometimes incorrectly, as labels that hypochondriacs
find acceptable.
Conversion disorder:
This is an unconscious disorder that produces pseudo physiological
symptoms that help resolve a personal conflict. The symptoms
or deficit is not intentionally produced or feigned (as in
factitious disorder or malingering). The symptoms cause clinically
significant distress or impairment in social, occupational
or other important areas of functioning. The classic Freudian
example of this occurred when a son wanted to hit his father.
His hand became paralyzed, which is the conversion disorder.
Somatization disorder:
This person has multiple complaints involving various organ
systems, which are not amenable to psychiatric treatment.
This disorder is usually apparent by age 25 and affects more
women than men with a ratio of 10:1. During the course of
the disturbance, the person must have four pain symptoms affecting
different sites, two gastrointestinal symptoms, one sexual
symptom and one pseudoneurological symptom.
Pain associated
with psychological factors: In this disorder psychological
factors are presumed to play a central role in initiating
or maintaining the pain symptoms. The person actually feels
pain in this unconsciously motivated disorder. Biofeedback
and physical therapy are often useful treatment as they offer
a face-saving way for the person to give up the psychological
symptoms.
Clues for detecting malingering
Malingering
is different than the above psychological disorders.
It can manifest in several ways:
1. A medical condition is fabricated,
with or without the assistance of a healthcare provider (doctor,
nurse practitioner, physicians assistant, chiropractor,
etc.) When this occurs, the patient claims to have a series
of non-existent problems. The healthcare provider may be unsuspecting,
accepting the patients complaints at face value. Rarely,
the attorney or others may discover that the healthcare provider
knowingly participated in providing treatment for a non-existent
disorder.
2. A medical condition or injury
that resulted from the incident is exaggerated for financial
gain. Either the patient or the healthcare provider may do
this. In this situation, the medical records contain evidence
of over-treatment for minor problems. Examples include months
of chiropractic treatment for low back pain, or physical therapy
without improvement. This is not to be confused with those
patients who have legitimate serious injuries that fail to
respond to conservative treatment.
3. The accident is staged so
that the injury is deliberately caused. A common scheme is
to include multiple alleged victims. All are cared for by
the same healthcare provider, all have the same medical diagnosis,
all have the same treatment plan and even have treatment on
the same day. Malingerers are usually not willing to produce
disease in themselves or undergo extensive painful diagnostic
testing, treatment or surgery.
4. Physicians are taught that
there is an increased risk of malingering when plaintiffs
with significant financial stressors have filed a lawsuit,
or those who attribute all of their problems to the accident.
5. There is a marked discrepancy
between the person's claimed symptoms and the medical or psychiatric
findings.
6. The plaintiff displays a lack
of cooperation during the physician's evaluation and noncompliance
with treatment.
7. The plaintiff has an anti-social
or borderline personality.
8. The plaintiff claims to have
preposterous symptoms. The individual may consciously and
intentionally fake poor responses on neuropsychological tests.
Additional suspicious
factors:
1. The
claimed injuries dont match the minor nature of the
accident. The classic and controversial example of this is
the soft tissue injury following a low velocity crash.
2. The medical record will have
inconsistencies. Sometimes basic demographic information is
wrong, or the description of the injuries keeps changing.
3. One or more of the plaintiffs
have a post office box or a hotel instead of a street address.
4. The plaintiff may be overly
directing in the treatment plan by requesting certain drugs,
treatments or therapies.
5. The plaintiff may change doctors
when the release for work is issued.
6. The plaintiff is excessively
needy, demanding an unusually large amount of attention from
the healthcare providers and the plaintiff attorney.
7. The plaintiff has a prior
history of substance abuse. Medical records reveal evidence
of drug seeking behavior (described in further detail below.)
8. The physician has a pattern
of over-treating patients. This providers patterns may
be detected by comparison of treatment patterns with those
of others in the same specialty. The attorney generals
offices are increasingly targeting fraudulent practices of
healthcare providers. In our managed care era, software programs
used by insurance companies are identifying those who have
received an excessive amount of treatment, and then activating
decisions to deny reimbursement.
9. The attending physician has
informed the plaintiff that he or she is able to return to
work, but the person fails to do so.
10. Treatment for the injury
is begun more than three weeks after the accident.
11. The attending physician is
treating the plaintiff for problems that are outside of the
scope of his or her specialty area of medicine.
But can malingering be
detected?
There is
much emphasis on identifying malingering. Many individuals
including physicians and attorneys believe they can diagnose
malingering. Is it so simple? Rosenhan (1973) conducted a
classic study in this area. Dr. Rosenhan had a series of people
(pseudopatients) go to a psychiatric hospital and feign a
single symptom. They reported hearing voices that said "empty",
"hollow" or "thud". They were instructed
to otherwise describe their mental state honestly without
revealing their occupation or that they were part of the study.
Some of the pseudopatients were mental health professionals.
All of the pseudopatients were admitted to the hospital and
diagnosed as having major psychiatric disorders.
Once in the hospital, they were
to stop feigning any symptoms. Nevertheless, none of the pseudopatients
were detected by the professional staff. At the time of their
eventual discharge, their psychiatric diagnoses were not overturned.
Their symptoms were said to be in remission. When Dr. Rosenhan's
results were challenged, he said he would repeat the study.
Subsequently, a number of individuals were identified as Rosenhan
pseudopatients. However, Dr. Rosenhan did not send anyone
else to the hospital.
It is common to underestimate
the knowledge, preparation and skills of some malingerers.
These people may gain access to textbooks describing medical
disorders and also their examination methods; including those
used to detect falsification of symptoms. Medical libraries
are usually not closed to the public, making it easy for an
intelligent person to gain information about a medical condition.
The plaintiff may suffer an injury
and then go on to magnify or fake continuing difficulties.
Extensive contact with lawyers, doctors and even other patients
can provide superb training in the symptoms associated with
a real disorder. When the stakes are high, malingerers may
go to great lengths to pull off acts of deception.
Research suggests that laypeople
and professionals from a variety of disciplines such as psychology;
medicine and the law are poor at identifying lies. Seeing
the person face to face as opposed to reviewing records does
not necessarily aid in the detection of malingering. Many
studies have raised doubts about how easy it is to detect
malingering. The true incidence of malingering remains largely
unknown. Could it be that the discomfort we feel with the
idea that a person would fake illness explains the few medical
articles written on this topic?
Consider these points
when facing the issue of malingering:
1. Review
the medical records to see if a neuropsychologist or psychologist
has evaluated the patient. Testing may include the Minnesota
Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI). The MMPI-2 has an
F scale that is called the malingering index. It addresses
symptoms that are stereotypically associated with serious
psychopathology but are rarely found in patients with serious
disorders. Look at the conclusions of the report to determine
if any comments were made about the F scale. The F-K score
is another potentially useful indicator touted as having the
ability to distinguish malingerers from non-malingering subjects.
The Lee-Haleys Fake Bad Scale, a unique combination
of MMPI test items, has been investigated specifically for
the purpose of identification of faking of emotional disorders.
Review medical records to determine
if the healthcare providers suspected malingering. Suspicions
may be voiced in office notes or correspondence. Commonly
observations include:
-
The patient is seeking secondary
gains
-
There is over-reaction to
examinations
-
The patient has a functional
overlay
-
The symptoms are not organic
in nature
2. Sometimes the comments of
the physician are difficult to interpret, as in this sentence
found in an IME report: "The multiple responses by this
patient to investigative stimuli indicates that there remains
at this time a large supratentorial magnification of mild
to moderate low back symptoms potentiated by sympathetic mendicants
and external morbidizing factors." This is a convoluted
way of saying that the patients symptoms were in her
head and were worsened by her medications and factors that
kept her in the sick role.
3. Look for evidence of drug-seeking
behavior. This may be manifested in a number of ways. The
plaintiff may make frequent visits to the emergency departments
asking for narcotics. The drug-seeking patient claims to have
lost prescriptions before or after they were filled, or asks
the doctor for increasing amounts of pain medications. This
individual makes unannounced visits to the doctors office
requesting pain medication, and obtains prescriptions from
more than one healthcare provider without informing the other
treating doctors of prescriptions received from someone else.
The patient may also frequently switch doctors, looking for
the perfect supplier of drugs.
4. Do not let subjective confidence
in your ability to detect malingering be your guide. The successful
malingerer rarely confesses after fooling us. The individual
we have falsely called a malingerer is unlikely to convince
us otherwise. Overconfidence leads to premature conclusions,
insufficient data collection and failure to make appropriate
decisions. The word malingering is an accusation of fraudulent
intent, which must be sustained by evidence. A false diagnosis
of malingering constitutes a grave injustice to the patient.
5. Consider having surveillance
videotaping performed. Both defense and plaintiff attorneys
have used this strategy to answer questions about the plaintiff's
capabilities.
6. Seek information from other
sources. Carefully review the medical and employment records
for inconsistencies. The person who claimed proficient academic
skills before the accident may have had trouble spelling basic
words when filling out a pre-accident job application. The
patient who shows marked weakness of both arms may have bragged
to the recreational therapist about recently setting a record
high score in bowling. The more thoroughly one reviews the
background records, the greater the opportunity to spot contradictions.
7. Recognize that the detection
of malingering can be extremely difficult.
For more information, see our
books on independent
medical exams.
Resources
Hall, H. and Pritchard, D. (1996), Detecting Malingering
and Deception, Boca Raton, FL: St. Lucie Press
Rosenhan, D. (1973) On being
sane in an insane place. Science 179:250
Schafer, S. and Nowlis, D. (1998,
March/April), Personality Disorders Among Difficult Patients,
Archives of Family Medicine, Vol. 7, 126
Med League
Support Services has nurses are skilled at analyzing
medical records for behavior suspicious of seeking drugs
or malingering.
Please contact our office for more information.
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