Physics Guy wrote:DrW's 1.3% figure for the incidence of DID is actually on the low end of what I've found from the first few online sources I checked. But doesn't it seem awfully high?
It's only smaller than the proportion of gay people by a factor of three or so, and there have been quite a few gay people in my own circles of family, friends, and acquaintances over the years. I'm not aware of ever having actually met someone with DID.
Okay, if someone had DID they might not be shouting about it to me. Still, though. The figure seems high for such a drastic condition. Something that affects 1.3% of the population is something which touches everyone: everyone will know someone who has it. Is that really the case for DID?
DID is the most severe of several types of Dissociative Disorder as recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM5), and in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). Others disorders in this classification include:
• Dissociative amnesia including Dissociative Fugue
• Depersonalization/Derealization disorder
• Other Specified Dissociative Disorder
• Unspecified Dissociative Disorder
When one realizes that the principal etiological factor in all of these disorders, as well as a frequently recognized contributing factor in other mental health disorders including some forms of schizophrenia and borderline personality disorder, is
abuse and neglect of young children, the numbers may not seem so high. Also consider that estimates put the proportion of sufferers who seek clinical treatment at less than 10%.
It's no accident that most dissociative disorders, as well as other mental illnesses, become manifest in the early teens to twenties. Clinicians know that the abnormal changes in brain function associated with these disorders precede symptomatic changes in behavior by a decade or more. The same is true for onset of dementia later in life. Donald Trump, who had a distant mother and an overbearing authoritarian father as a young child, had to be sent to a military academy because of behavioral problems by age 13, has struggled intellectually his entire life, and is now a pathological liar who exhibits florid symptoms of narcissistic personality disorder and early stage dementia, serves as an example on both ends of the age spectrum.
Adults who abuse or neglect young children often rob these children of a normal productive life. More often than not, the abusers are not aware of the long term harm they do, and more often still the abusers are able to avoid any consequences for their actions.