Self-diagnosis



A physician who treats himself has a fool for a patient. Self-diagnosis, as the name would suggest, is when one attempts to diagnose oneself or family and friends when experiencing certain symptoms, typically with the help of symptom checkers or lists of symptoms found in books and, increasingly, the internet. With the proliferation of social media, this may also include symptoms provided in viral social media posts.

Symptom checkers may be useful for finding what one should do (e.g. whether to go to a pharmacy, book an appointment with their doctor, call an ambulance, etc.), but in and of themselves they are useless and potentially dangerous as they may result in the individual using ineffective treatments whilst snubbing help which is effective. Alternatively, the nocebo effect may make the person's condition feel even worse, resulting in them worrying more than is necessary.

The problem with this is that even when the symptom checker one is using is from a trustworthy source, the vast majority of people have no medical training and thus may have difficulty noticing things that a professional doctor or nurse may notice (it doesn't help that some different diseases may have similar symptoms) and also may not have access to equipment which may help them determine the cause of the symptoms.

Patterns in self-diagnosis
Psychiatric self-diagnosis is popular. People are more likely to diagnose themselves with mental conditions such as:
 * Autism/Asperger syndrome
 * Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder
 * Bipolar disorder
 * Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
 * Personality disorders

More far-fetched examples include self-diagnosing with dissociative identity disorder, or self-diagnoses that otherwise include existential woo such as "otherkin" and "therian" identities (which are not supported by scientific evidence), and other purported phenomena such as indigo children. While some otherkin people openly admit they're just doing it for fun or to cope while they're going through a hard time, other times these people are serious.

Some people self diagnose simply because they lack opportunity for a formal diagnosis, there is stigma in seeking aid, or because other people refuse to help them. For example, In these situations, a change of circumstances (like a more understanding doctor or better health insurance) may lead to the person getting an accurate medical diagnosis.
 * The expense of seeing a doctor in the US is so high that many undiagnosed people or people suffering from mysterious symptoms had to make do with the internet.
 * Women have tales about struggling to get doctors to take their symptoms seriously.
 * African Americans have huge issue with untreated and undiagnosed mental illnesses due to mental health issues being stigmatized in their communities.
 * Minors with unhelpful or downright awful parents may not be able to see a doctor in order to seek proper diagnosis and treatment. Self-diagnosis on the internet can simply be a symptom of people desperate for answers.

And then other people have less logical reasons for self-diagnosing.
 * They need a scapegoat for issues with their own life.
 * They have illness anxiety disorder (formerly known as hypochondria), and worry excessively about their health.
 * They don't feel special, and think self-diagnosing will fix that.
 * They're attention seeking, and either haven't realized that they can just ask people to hang out with them, or have parents that are so legitimately awful that the child fakes a disorder in the hopes of finally getting some attention.

Mistreatment
People who self diagnose may be mocked, especially online. Unfortunately, this can mean that teens who don't know any better, or people who actually do have a mental illness or disability, may be targeted unfairly.

Self-diagnosed people may also be accused of harming people who have been professionally diagnosed with various disabilities and conditions, and of causing these people to not be taken seriously (Though some of these real disabled people have pointed out that they aren't taken seriously in the first place ).

Stemming from this, harassment over whether someone is faking an illness or disability is an issue on social media. Professionally diagnosed autistic people can be harassed over the validity of their diagnosis if they defend self-diagnosis.

It's worth pointing out that without a paper diagnosis, people can't access special resources at school or work, so they aren't taking away anything from people with confirmed disabilities.

Acceptance
Some communities show support and acceptance towards people who self-diagnose such as certain neurodiversity communities. This is more common in cases where a diagnosis can be difficult to obtain (e.g., autism), or where mental health resources are poor or cost-prohibitive (e.g., inadequate coverage under one's insurance in the United States).

Autistic adults, for example, tend to embrace self-diagnosed autistics as part of their community, assuming that the person is likely autistic but unable to access appropriate resources at the moment. There is some logic behind this. For example, one clinician found that 88% of people who thought they were autistic received an autism diagnosis. Thus, someone who thinks they are autistic is probably correct. Although this can be argued to be more related to the fact that in recent years, rates in autism diagnosis have been consistently going up and could be been perceived to be due to the overdiagnosis of the condition. It also is relatively controversial in the autism advocacy community for self-diagnosis to be seen as a valid means of diagnosis, in that it could risk neurotypicals identifying with the condition, and may end up minimizing or misrepresenting the actual struggles individuals who actually have the condition as well as their needs and desires.

Comparison with factitious disorder
People who self-diagnose are sometimes accused of being attention-seeking snowflakes. While that may be a matter of opinion, some go further by accusing those who self-diagnose of having factitious disorder (formerly known as Münchhausen syndrome), a condition listed in the DSM-V in which a person fakes illness in order to receive sympathy. With the rise in popularity of TikTok and other short-form social media, the more common terms used are the less formal "Münchhausen by Internet" or "Digital Factitious Disorder (DID)"

However, people with factitious disorder -- at least offline -- are more likely to lie and say that they have a professional diagnosis when they do not. People who self-diagnose tend to be honest about it.