220 -Tips for Enhancing and Understanding Mental Health in the Elderly




Counselor Toolbox Podcast show

Summary: <p>Mental Health and<br> the Elderly<br> Instructor: Dr. Dawn-Elise Snipes PhD, LPC-MHSP, LMHC<br> Podcast Host: Counselor Toolbox &amp; Happiness Isn’t Brain Surgery<br> Objectives<br> ~ Normal Life-Cycle Tasks<br> ~ Cognitive Capacity With Aging<br> ~ Change, Human Potential, and Creativity<br> ~ Coping With Loss and Bereavement<br> ~ Mood Disorders<br> ~ Alzheimer’s Disease<br> ~ Schizophrenia in Late Life<br> ~ Prevention and Helping the Person Live Well<br> ~ Treatment Overview<br> ~ Overview of Services and Service Delivery Settings<br> ~ Issues Facing Families and Caregivers<br> Normal Life Cycle Tasks<br> ~ Normal aging is a gradual process that ushers in some physical decline, such as decreased sensory abilities (e.g., vision and hearing) and decreased pulmonary and immune function<br> ~ Important aspects of mental health include<br> ~ Stable intellectual functioning<br> ~ Capacity for change<br> ~ Productive engagement with life<br> Cognitive Decline<br> ~ It is often partly preventable<br> ~ Slowing or some loss of other cognitive functions takes place, most notably in:<br> ~ Information processing<br> ~ Selective attention<br> ~ Problem-solving ability<br> ~ Prevention and early intervention should focus on<br> ~ Encouraging different problem solving tasks (hobbies, puzzles etc.)<br> ~ Maintaining physical activity to improve blood flow<br> ~ Maintaining a good sleep routine (including addressing bladder issues)<br> Change<br> ~ Capacity to change can occur even in the face of mental illness, adversity, and chronic mental health problems.<br> ~ Older persons display flexibility in behavior and attitudes and the ability to grow intellectually and emotionally.<br> ~ Externally imposed demands upon one’s time may diminish which leaves plenty of time to embark upon new social, psychological, educational, and recreational pathways.<br> Change<br> ~ Ego Integrity vs. Despair can now be seen in two phases<br> ~ Retirement/liberation<br> ~ feelings of freedom, courage, and confidence are experienced. Those at risk for faring poorly are individuals who typically do not want to retire, who are compelled to retire because of poor health, or who experience a significant decline in their standard of living<br> ~ Summing up/swan Song (Cohen)<br> ~ tendency to appraise one’s life work, ideas, and discoveries and to share them with family or society. The desire to sum up late in life is driven by varied feelings, such as the desire to complete one’s life work, the desire to give back after receiving much in life, or the fear of time evaporating<br> Loss and Bereavement<br> ~ Studies on aging reveal that most older people generally do not have a fear or dread of death in the absence of being depressed, encountering serious loss, or having been recently diagnosed with a terminal illness<br> ~ Losses with aging<br> ~ Social status<br> ~ Self-esteem<br> ~ Physical capacities<br> ~ Death of friends and loved ones<br> ~ Other??<br> Loss and Bereavement<br> ~ Persistent bereavement or serious depression is NOT considered normal.<br> ~ Bereavement is an important and well-established risk factor for depression. At least 10 to 20 percent of widows and widowers develop clinically significant depression during the first year of bereavement. Without treatment, such depressions tend to persist, become chronic, and lead to further disability</p> <p>Overview of Mental Disorders<br> ~ Older adults are encumbered by many of the same mental disorders as are other adults; however, the prevalence, nature, and course of each disorder may be very different<br> ~ Many older individuals present with somatic complaints which amplify physical symptoms, distracting patients’ and providers’ attention from the underlying depression<br> ~ Many older patients may deny psychological symptoms<br> ~ They experience symptoms of depression and anxiety that do</p>