Misplaced Pages

Did

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The purpose of this redirect is currently being discussed by the Misplaced Pages community. The outcome of the discussion may result in a change of this page, or possibly its deletion in accordance with Misplaced Pages's deletion policy.
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This title is currently a redirect to Dissociative identity disorder; click there to go to the current target. The full content of this redirect page, including all redirect categories, is displayed below.

#REDIRECT Dissociative identity disorder

This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect:
  • From other capitalisation: This is a redirect from a title with another method of capitalisation. It leads to the title in accordance with the Misplaced Pages naming conventions for capitalisation, or it leads to a title that is associated in some way with the conventional capitalisation of this redirect title. This may help writing, searching and international language issues.
    • If this redirect is an incorrect capitalisation, then {{R from miscapitalisation}} should be used instead, and pages that use this link should be updated to link directly to the target. Miscapitalisations can be tagged in any namespace.
    • Use this rcat to tag only mainspace redirects; when other capitalisations are in other namespaces, use {{R from modification}} instead.
  • From an ambiguous term: This is a redirect from an ambiguous page name to a page or list that disambiguates it. These redirects are pointed to by links that should always be disambiguated. Therefore, this template should never appear on a page that has "(disambiguation)" in its title – in that case use {{R to disambiguation page}} instead.
When appropriate, protection levels are automatically sensed, described and categorized.
Category: