Dissociative experiences are common among clients, especially those who have experienced complex trauma and attachment wounds. In fact, disorganized attachment is a strong predictor of dissociation, with anywhere between 15–25 percent of clients with this attachment style having experienced dissociation. What’s more is that, besides DID and OSDD, at least a dozen diagnoses in the
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) have dissociation listed as a possible symptom.
The
DSM estimates that 1–1.5 percent of the population meets criteria for DID but the reality is that the condition is likely much more prevalent than is currently reported. That’s because, unfortunately, many clients who meet criteria for DID are underdiagnosed or misdiagnosed, so they are only treated for co-occurring disorders that are easier to recognize (e.g., PTSD, BPD). However, until a client’s DID diagnosis is acknowledged, treatment for any comorbid conditions is unlikely to be successful.
Once you accept that DID is not rare, you will discover that the likelihood of encountering a client with this condition is high, especially if you work from a trauma lens and routinely encounter clients with early childhood trauma and attachment wounds. Therefore, it is imperative that you become comfortable in assessing the types and degrees of dissociation that your clients are experiencing in order to rule DID in or out.
An accurate diagnosis of a DID client requires a client to experience five types of dissociation: (1) dissociative amnesia, (2) depersonalization, (3) derealization, (4) identity alteration, and (5) identity confusion. Since dissociative disorders are at least as common, and perhaps more common, than many other psychiatric disorders, the International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation recommends that every new client be assessed for these symptoms.
You can begin by asking whether the client loses chunks of time (dissociative amnesia) and whether their body feels like it doesn’t belong to them (depersonalization). If they cannot remember what happened during the lost time and if they don’t feel their body belongs to them, this increases the likelihood of a DID diagnosis. In addition, you should ask clients whether they’ve ever had the experience of a familiar setting suddenly becoming radically unfamiliar (derealization), as well as whether they have experienced strangers recognizing them and claiming to know them—possibly even calling the client by a different name (identity alteration). Finally, you should ask the client whether they sometimes feel like they don’t know who they are, as if they feel like they are another person (identity confusion).
Use these
free screening questions to help you get started in assessing Dissociative Identity Disorder, so you and your client can have early discussions that are instructive to the diagnostic process.
And while
An Introductory Clinical Guide to Dissociative Identity Disorder is a great resource, due to the complexity of this work, I encourage you to seek out additional training and ongoing supervision when working with clients with DID. Equally important is that you be aware of the risks of countertransference, especially if you grew up in an environment characterized by insecure attachment. This work requires that you be fully present, curious, nonjudgmental, flexible, and emotionally stable. Although these attributes are necessary for any therapeutic work involving complex trauma and attachment wounds, they are especially important when working with clients with DID.