HIGHLIGHTS
SUMMARY
The deeper problem of self-diagnosed conditions, with strong narrative components and labeling of emotions, related to self-categorizations transforming the way people perceive themselves. In parallel, to bear witness to these emerging clinical pictures, the authors propose to isolate four elements: a clinical vignette, a list of the typical symptoms found in these patients, an example of their specific vocabulary, and a set of explanations for their definition of "DID" and their expression of symptoms. Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) is included in the International Classification of Diseases, Eleventh Edition (ICD-11) in the . . .
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