Article Figures & Data
Tables
Mechanism Definition True allegation Estimated around 90% of the time. Parental misinterpretation and suggestion The parent has taken an innocent remark or neutral piece of behavior, inflated it into something worse, and inadvertently induced the child to endorse his or her interpretation (p 904). Misinterpreted physical condition A parent who is vindictive or overly anxious or a mental health professional who is misinformed may jump to the conclusion that a child's injury or illness was caused by sexual abuse rather than accepting a more benign explanation (p 905). Parental delusion The parent is a severely disturbed, paranoid person. He or she has actively shared a distorted world view with the child, who now shares the same delusion (p 905). Parental indoctrination The parent fabricated the allegation and instructed the child in what to say (p 905). Interviewer suggestion Previous interviewers may have inadvertently contaminated the evidence by asking leading or suggestive questions (p 905). Fantasy The child may have confused fantasy and reality (p 905). Delusion Although rare, delusions about sexual activities may occur in older children and adolescents in the context of a psychotic illness (p 905). Misinterpretation A misinterpretation may also cause a false belief, but it is derived from something that actually happened in the first place (p 905). Miscommunication A false allegation of abuse may arise out of a simple verbal misunderstanding (p 906). Confabulation The concept of confabulation usually implies that the patient fabricates statements or stories in response to questions about events that the person did not actually recall (p 906). Pseudologica phantastica Called fantasy lying and pathological lying … defined as telling false stories without discernible or adequate motive and with such zeal that the subject may become convinced of the truth (p 906). From Reference 60.