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Atlanta Medical
Psychology
The clinical
practice of Dr. David B. Adams is located in The Medical Quarters in
the northside of Atlanta at the junction of Scottish Rite, Northside
and Saint Joseph's Hospitals. Dr. Adams consults to occupational
medicine, surgeons, nurse case managers, insurers and employers
regarding the psychological impact of work-related injury and the
role of psychological factors in short- and long-term
disability. |

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Definition:
The deliberate exaggeration of psychological and/or physical
complaints for purposes of tangible gain (Eg. monetary rewards, etc)
is referred to as malingering. The use of the health care system and
its resources are severely impacted by patients who malinger. Access
to clinicians by patients with valid concerns can be obstructed as
well as costs escalated by needless tests for falsified symptoms.
Presentation:
Malingering can be expressed in several forms from pure malingering in
which the individual falsifies all symptoms to partial malingering in
which the individual has symptoms but exaggerates the impact which
they have upon daily functioning. Another form of malingering is
simulation in which the person emulates symptoms of a specific
disability or dissimulation when the patient denies the existence of
problems which would account for the symptoms (Eg. drug abuse, etc).
Another form of malingering is false imputation in which the
individual has valid symptoms but is dishonest as to the source of the
problems, attributing them, for example, to an automobile accident
when the cause was, in fact, an injury occurring in the home.
Motivation:
While, as indicated, the malingering individual is seeking tangible
gains such as time-off from work and/or financial gain, the underlying
motivations may differ among such patients. Indeed, there may be
individuals who falsify their symptoms because they believe that it is
inevitable that such symptoms will arise later. For example, an
individual may state that they have symptoms of infection when not
present, while they can receive compensation, because they believe
that they will likely develop the infection at some future point.
Concerns:
The financial, time and energy commitment created by malingering
individuals is an appreciable problem in health care. Whether the goal
be to obtain narcotics, to obtain time off from work and/or to secure
financial benefits such as disability payment, the costs to the health
care delivery system have proved enormous.
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