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What's new
Head injuries, fake suffering, claims, insurance companies
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Half of the people suffering from head injuries that go to court fake their ailments to receive financial help. This a very interesting conclusion resulting from research carried out in the University of Granada (Universidad de Granada) among patients suffering from head injuries. It reveals that 4 out of 10 patients feign cognitive disorders such as depression, headaches or anxiety. A lie detector was used in this research and it proved to be a useful tool to help professionals from the field of neuropsychology to find out when a person is faking or exaggerating their symptoms. How can it be proved that a patient is lying when they say that they have a cognitive problem, such as memory or concentration problems or anxiety? There are many people who exaggerate their injuries and even feign them in order to receive more money from insurance companies or obtain a sick leave, according to a pioneering research in Spain. This research was carried out in the Department of Personality, Assessment and Psychological Treatment of the University of Granada by Doctor Raquel Vilar López.
Until now, in Spain no reliable system
existed to detect if a person was faking their symptoms. For this reason the
study by Vilar López coordinated by Manuel Gómez Río and Miguel Pérez García
is so important: for the first time, Spanish health professionals have a set
of reliable tools to prove empirically if a patient is lying when they
declare, for example, that their memory problems renders them unfit for
work. These neuropsychological tests were included in a three-hour-long battery
of neuropsychological tests which assesses other cognitive aspects of the
patient in order to disguise the actual tests and in this way obtain the
desired information. The percentage of patients who suffer from head injuries that feign
symptoms is nearly the same as that obtained by the American researchers. Vilar López used this equipment with a group of 80 Psychology students as
the “analogous group”, that is, as no patient would admit being a simulator,
a group of people without any disorders were asked to fake them in order to
confirm the validity of the test. Furthermore, 54 actual patients were
analyzed by the doctor. These patients belonged to different departments of
the University Hospital Virgen de las Nieves in Granada.
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Disclaimer: The information and recommendations contained and presented in this website have been compiled from sources believed to be reliable and scientifically correct. However Progressive Insurance Company Ltd, makes no guarantee as to, and assumes no responsibility for, the correctness, sufficiency, or completeness of such information or recommendations. Other or additional information or safety measures may be required under particular circumstances.