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- Primary_and_secondary_gain abstract "Primary gain or secondary gain are used in medicine to describe the significant psychological motivators patients may have in reporting symptoms.Primary gain produces positive internal motivations. For example, a patient might feel guilty about being unable to perform some task. If he has a medical condition justifying his inability, he might not feel so bad. Primary gain can be a component of any disease, but is most dramatically demonstrated in conversion disorder (a psychiatric disorder in which stressors manifest themselves as physical symptoms without organic causes, such as a person who becomes blindly inactive after seeing a murder). The \"gain\" may not be particularly evident to an outside observer.Secondary gain can also be a component of any disease, but is an external motivator. If a patient's disease allows him/her to miss work, avoid military duty, obtain financial compensation, obtain drugs, or avoid a jail sentence, these would be examples of secondary gain. These may, but need not be, recognized by the patient. If he/she is deliberately exaggerating symptoms for personal gain, then he/she is malingering. However, secondary gain may simply be an unconscious psychological component of symptoms and other personalities. In the context of a person with a significant mental or psychiatric disability, this effect is sometimes called secondary handicap.Tertiary gain, a less well-studied process, is when a third party such as a relative or friend is motivated to gain sympathy or other benefits from the illness of the victim.".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageID "307408".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageLength "1978".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageOutDegree "6".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageRevisionID "565408897".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mental_and_behavioural_disorders.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLink Conversion_disorder.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLink Diagnostic_and_Statistical_Manual_of_Mental_Disorders.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLink Malingering.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLink Medicine.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLink Motivation.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLinkText "Primary and secondary gain".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageWikiLinkText "primary and secondary gain".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Mental-health-stub.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses2.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain subject Category:Mental_and_behavioural_disorders.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain type Redirect.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain comment "Primary gain or secondary gain are used in medicine to describe the significant psychological motivators patients may have in reporting symptoms.Primary gain produces positive internal motivations. For example, a patient might feel guilty about being unable to perform some task. If he has a medical condition justifying his inability, he might not feel so bad.".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain label "Primary and secondary gain".
- Primary_and_secondary_gain sameAs Q1495775.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain sameAs Krankheitsgewinn.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain sameAs Ganho_secundário.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain sameAs m.01sqf9.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain sameAs Sjukdomsvinst.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain sameAs Q1495775.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain wasDerivedFrom Primary_and_secondary_gain?oldid=565408897.
- Primary_and_secondary_gain isPrimaryTopicOf Primary_and_secondary_gain.