Primary, Secondary, and Tertiary Gains in Dissociative Disorders
A precise, theory-driven and clinically grounded explanation
In dissociative disorders, the constructs of primary, secondary, and tertiary gain provide a multi-level explanatory framework integrating psychodynamic theory, learning theory, and systems theory. These concepts clarify why symptoms emerge, persist, and become resistant to treatment, without implying intentionality.
đ§ 1. Primary Gain (Intrapsychic Mechanism)
Definition
Primary gain refers to the reduction of internal psychological conflict or anxiety achieved through symptom formation.
Theoretical basis
- Classical psychodynamic theory (Freud: symptom as compromise formation)
- Dissociation as a defense mechanism protecting the ego from intolerable affect
Mechanism
- Exposure to overwhelming affect (trauma, conflict)
- Failure of integrative processing (memoryâaffectâidentity coherence)
- Activation of dissociation â functional compartmentalization of experience
This may involve:
- Amnesia (failure of retrieval of autobiographical memory)
- Depersonalization/derealization (altered selfâenvironment integration)
- Identity fragmentation (in severe forms)
Neurobiological correlates
- Increased prefrontal inhibitory control over limbic regions
- Reduced amygdala activation in depersonalization (emotional overmodulation)
- Disruption in default mode network (DMN) integration
- Altered hippocampalâcortical connectivity affecting memory consolidation
đ Primary gain explains symptom formation through affect regulation and conflict avoidance.
đ 2. Secondary Gain (Behavioral Reinforcement)
Definition
Secondary gain refers to external advantages or reinforcements that follow the symptom and increase its likelihood of persistence.
Theoretical basis
- Operant conditioning (reinforcement principles)
- Behavioral models of illness maintenance
Associated with B. F. Skinnerâs framework:
- Positive reinforcement â addition of rewarding stimuli
- Negative reinforcement â removal of aversive stimuli
Mechanism
Once the dissociative symptom occurs:
- It may lead to increased care, attention, or support
- It may facilitate avoidance of stressors (academic, occupational, interpersonal)
These consequences:
- Strengthen the stimulusâresponse association
- Increase the probability of recurrence and chronicity
Neurobehavioral substrate
- Engagement of reward pathways (dopaminergic systems)
- Learning of contextâsymptom contingencies
đ Secondary gain explains symptom persistence via reinforcement learning.
đ¨âđŠâđ§ 3. Tertiary Gain (System-Level Reinforcement)
Definition
Tertiary gain refers to benefits accrued by others (family/system) as a result of the patientâs illness, contributing to maintenance of the symptom.
Theoretical basis
- Family systems theory
- Concepts of homeostasis, role stabilization, and triangulation
Influenced by the work of:
- Murray Bowen
- Salvador Minuchin
Mechanism
The symptom assumes a functional role within the system:
- Maintains relational equilibrium
- Reduces overt conflict by redirecting focus
- Stabilizes roles (patientâcaregiver dynamics)
This leads to:
- Implicit reinforcement of illness behavior
- Resistance to change at the system level
đ Tertiary gain explains systemic embedding and chronicity.
đ§Š Integrated Model
| Level | Domain | Mechanism | Clinical Role |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Intrapsychic | Defense, affect regulation | Symptom formation |
| Secondary | Behavioral | Reinforcement (conditioning) | Symptom persistence |
| Tertiary | Systemic | Family homeostasis | Chronicity/resistance |
â ď¸ Diagnostic Clarification
It is critical to distinguish these mechanisms from:
- Factitious Disorder
- Malingering
In dissociative disorders:
- Symptom production is not consciously motivated
- Gains are epiphenomena, not primary drivers
đ ď¸ Treatment Implications
Targeting Primary Gain
- Trauma-focused psychotherapy
- Integration of dissociated experiences
- Enhancing affect tolerance
Targeting Secondary Gain
- Behavioral interventions
- Reducing reinforcement contingencies
- Gradual functional restoration
Targeting Tertiary Gain
- Family-based interventions
- Modifying systemic reinforcements
- Restoring adaptive relational patterns
đ Key Takeaway
- Primary gain â explains why the symptom forms
- Secondary gain â explains why it persists
- Tertiary gain â explains why it becomes entrenched
Together, they provide a comprehensive biopsychosocial model of dissociative symptomatology, integrating intrapsychic defense, learned behavior, and systemic dynamics.
đ§ Dissociative Disorders â DSM-5-TR & ICD-11 (Crisp Exam Sheet)
đš DSM-5-TR
- Dissociative Identity Disorder â 300.14 (F44.81)
âĽ2 identities + memory gaps + distress - Dissociative Amnesia â 300.12 (F44.0)
Autobiographical memory loss (trauma-related)
Specifier: with fugue - Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder â 300.6 (F48.1)
Depersonalization/derealization + intact reality testing - Other Specified Dissociative Disorder â 300.15 (F44.89)
- Unspecified Dissociative Disorder â 300.15 (F44.9)
đ ICD-11 (6B60â6B6Z)
- Dissociative Neurological Symptom Disorder â 6B60
Motor/sensory symptoms (conversion type) - Dissociative Amnesia â 6B61
- Trance Disorder â 6B62
- Possession Trance Disorder â 6B63
- Dissociative Identity Disorder â 6B64
- Partial Dissociative Identity Disorder â 6B65
- Depersonalization-Derealization Disorder â 6B66
- Other Specified Dissociative Disorder â 6B6Y
- Dissociative Disorder, Unspecified â 6B6Z
- DSM-5-TR: Narrower, conversion separate
- ICD-11: Broader, includes trance/possession + neurological type
âď¸ About the Author
Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T, MD (AIIMS, New Delhi), DNB, MBA (BITS Pilani)
Senior Consultant PsychiatristÂ
Apollo Clinic Velachery (Opp. Phoenix Mall)
â srinivasaiims@gmail.comâđ +91-8595155808