Maladaptive daydreaming should be included as a dissociative disorder in psychiatric manuals: position paper

Nirit Soffer-Dudek, Eli Somer, David Spiegel, Richard Chefetz, John O’Neil, Martin J. Dorahy, Etzel Cardeña, Daniel Mamah, Adriano Schimmenti, Alessandro Musetti, Suzette Boon, Annemiek van Dijke, Colin Ross, Ellert Nijenhuis, Annegret Krause-Utz, Paul Dell, Steven N. Gold, Igor Pietkiewicz, Joyanna Silberg, Kathy Steele, Andrew Moskowitz, Nel Draijer, Paula Thomson, Peter Barach, Philip Kinsler, Peter Maves, Vedat Şar, Christa Krüger, Warwick Middleton
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Abstract

Maladaptive daydreaming is a distinct syndrome in which the main symptom is excessive vivid fantasising that causes clinically significant distress and functional impairment in academic, vocational and social domains. Unlike normal daydreaming, maladaptive daydreaming is persistent, compulsive and detrimental to one’s life. It involves detachment from reality in favour of intense emotional engagement with alternative realities and often includes specific features such as psychomotor stereotypies (e.g. pacing in circles, jumping or shaking one’s hands), mouthing dialogues, facial gestures or enacting fantasy events. Comorbidity is common, but existing disorders do not account for the phenomenology of the symptoms. Whereas non-specific therapy is ineffective, targeted treatment seems promising. Thus, we propose that maladaptive daydreaming be considered a formal syndrome in psychiatric taxonomies, positioned within the dissociative disorders category. Maladaptive daydreaming satisfactorily meets criteria for conceptualisation as a psychiatric syndrome, including reliable discrimination from other disorders and solid interrater agreement. It involves significant dissociative aspects, such as disconnection from perception, behaviour and sense of self, and has some commonalities with but is not subsumed under existing dissociative disorders. Formal recognition of maladaptive daydreaming as a dissociative disorder will encourage awareness of a growing problem and spur theoretical, research and clinical developments.

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