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Aging and Mental Health: Current Concerns, Challenges

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Older women outnumbering older men 20.6 million to 14.4 million. With 143 women for every 100 men at age 65 ; this ration increases from 117 for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Aging and Mental Health: Current Concerns, Challenges


1
Aging and Mental HealthCurrent Concerns,
Challenges Future Directions
  • By
  • Maria C. Hernandez-Peck, Ph.D.
  • Center for Studies in Aging
  • Eastern WA University

2
As We Enter the 21st Century
  • An aging population of 35 million in 2000
  • With 1 in every 8, or 12.4 and older American
  • With 5,5574 individuals reaching age 65 each day
  • With those reaching age 65 having an average life
    expectancy of an additional 17.9 years

3
Categories of Older People
  • Young old (65 to 74) 18.4 million
  • Middle Old (75 to 84) 12.4 million
  • Old-Old (85) 4.2 million, the fastest growing
    group
  • Centenarians (100) 50,545

4
Some Current Statistics
  • Older women outnumbering older men 20.6 million
    to 14.4 million
  • With 143 women for every 100 men at age 65 this
    ration increases from 117 for the 65 to 69 age
    group, to 245 for the 85
  • With almost 400,00 grandparents age 65 having
    primary responsibility for their grandchildren
    who live with them

5
Projections for 2030
  • The older population will more than double to 70
    million
  • The 85 population will increase from 4.2 million
    in 2000 to 8.9 million
  • Members of minority groups will represent 25 of
    the older population, up from 16 in 2000

6
The Older Foreign Born
  • Accounted for 3.1 million of persons 65
  • 1/3 from Europe 31 from Latin America 22 from
    Asia, and 8 from other parts of the world
  • Anticipated future foreign born elders will be
    from Latin America or Asia
  • 2/3s of all foreign born elders have been in the
    U. S. over 30 years

7
Facts About Mental Health in the Later Years
  • The majority of older Americans cope
    constructively with the physical limitations,
    cognitive changes, and various losses, such as
    bereavement, that frequently are associated with
    late life.
  • On the other hand, a substantial proportion of
    the population age 55 and older, almost 20 of
    this age group, experience specific mental
    disorders that are not part of normal aging.

8
Severely Impairing Conditions If Unrecognized
or Untreated
  • Depression
  • Alzheimers Disease
  • Alcohol and Drug Abuse and Misuse
  • Anxiety
  • Late-life Schizophrenia

9
Challenges in Assessment and Diagnosis
  • Clinical presentation of older adults with mental
    disorders may be different from that of other
    adults, making detection of treatable illness
    more difficult.
  • Many older adults present with somatic complaints
    and experience symptoms of depression and anxiety
    that do not meet the full criteria for depressive
    or anxiety disorders.

10
  • Detection of mental disorders in older adults is
    further complicated by high co-morbidity with
    other medical disorders.
  • The symptoms of somatic disorders may mimic or
    mask psychopathology, making diagnosis more
    taxing.
  • Older individuals are more likely to report
    somatic symptoms than psychological ones, leading
    to further under identification of mental
    disorders.

11
  • Primary care providers carry much of the burden
    for diagnosis of mental disorders in older adults
  • However, the rates at which they recognize and
    properly identify disorders often are low.
  • With respect to depression, a significant number
    of depressed adults are neither diagnosed nor
    treated in primary care.

12
  • One study of primary care physicians, only 55 of
    internists felt confident in diagnosing
    depression, and even fewer (35 of the total)
    felt confident in prescribing antidepressants to
    older persons.
  • Researchers estimate that an unmet need for
    mental health services may be experienced by up
    to 63 of older adults aged 65 years and older
    with a mental disorder.

13
Identified Barriers to Treatment
  • Patient barriers (e.g., preference for primary
    care, tendency to emphasize somatic problems,
    reluctance to disclose psychological symptoms).
  • Provider Barriers (e.g., lack of awareness of
    manifestation of mental disorders, complexity of
    treatment, and reluctance to inform patients of a
    diagnosis).
  • Mental Health Delivery Systems Barriers (e.g.,
    time pressures, reimbursement policies).

14
  • Stereotypes about normal aging can also make
    diagnosis and assessment of mental disorders in
    late life challenging.
  • Ageism within the Mental Health Delivery System

15
Depression in Late Life
  • Depression is strikingly prevalent in older
    adults
  • With 8 to 20 of older adults in the community
    and up to 37 in primary care settings
    experiencing symptoms of depression.
  • Depression is a foremost risk factor for suicide
    in older adults.

16
Depression and Suicide
  • Older people have the highest rate of suicide in
    the U.S. population.
  • Suicide rates increase with age, with older white
    men having a rate of suicide up to six times that
    of the general population.
  • Depression is neither well recognized nor treated
    in primary care settings, where most older adults
    seek and receive health care.

17
  • Studies have found that undiagnosed and untreated
    depression in the primary care setting plays a
    significant role in suicide.
  • Depression training for general practitioners
    reduces suicide.
  • Suicide interventions, especially in the primary
    care setting, have become a priority of the U.S.
    Public Health Service.

18
  • Treatment for depression is typically successful,
    with response rates between 60 to 80, but the
    response generally takes longer than that for
    other adults.

19
Depression Suicide in the Elderly
  • More than half, or 51 of older individuals who
    have committed suicide have seen their primary
    care physician within one month of the suicide.
    (Caine, et. al. 1996)
  • Almost half had psychiatric symptoms. However,
    symptoms were recognized in less than one third.
  • Treatment was offered in less than 1/4 of the
    cases.
  • Treatment rendered was considered adequate in on
    2 of the cases.

20
  • Depression and suicide prevention strategies also
    are important for nursing home residents.
  • About half the patients newly relocated to
    nursing homes are at heightened risk for
    depression (Parmelee et.al., 1989).

21
Economic Toll
  • Depression as a whole is one of the most costly
    disorders in the U.S.
  • The direct and indirect costs of depression have
    been estimated at 43 billion each year, not
    including pain and suffering and diminished
    quality of life.
  • Late-life depression is particularly costly
    because of the excess disability it causes and
    its deleterious interaction with physical health.

22
  • Older primary care patients with depression visit
    the doctor and emergency room more often, use
    more medication, incur higher outpatient charges,
    and stay longer in the hospital.

23
Alzheimers Disease
  • 8 to 15 of people over age 65 have Alzheimers
    disease
  • The prevalence of dementia (most of which is
    accounted for by Alzheimers disease) nearly
    doubles with every 5 years of age after 60.
  • Studies also reveal age-related increases in
    Alzheimers disease.

24
Incidence by Age Group
  • One percent of those age 60 to 64 are affected
    with dementia
  • 2 of those age 65 to 69
  • 4 of those 70 to 74
  • 8 of those 75 to 79
  • 16 of those 80 to 84
  • 30 to 45 of those 85

25
Schizophrenia in Late Life
  • Although commonly thought of as an illness of
    young adulthood, schizophrenia can both extend
    into and first appear in later life.
  • The economic burden of late life schizophrenia is
    high. The mean cost of mental health service for
    schizophrenia has been found to be significantly
    higher than that for other mental disorders.

26
Alcohol and Substance Use Disorders in Late Life
  • Older people are not immune to the problems
    associated with improper use of alcohol and
    prescription drugs, but as a rule, misuse of
    alcohol and prescriptions medications appears to
    be a more common problem than abuse of illicit
    drugs.
  • It is anticipated that alcohol abuse or
    dependence will increase as the baby boomers age,
    since that cohort has a greater history of
    alcohol consumption than current cohorts of older
    adults.

27
Misuse of Prescription and Over the Counter
Medications
  • Older persons use prescription drugs
    approximately three times as frequently as the
    general population, and the use of
    over-the-counter medications by this group is
    even more extensive.
  • Annual estimated expenditures on prescription
    drugs by older adults in the U.S. are 15 billion
    annually.

28
Current Challenges
  • Transitioning to a Medicaid only system in
    providing Mental Health Services.
  • The fact that older persons in greatest need of
    mental health services will not self-refer.
  • Inadequate ways of identifying older persons in
    need mental health services.

29
  • Inability of primary health care providers in
    identifying depression in older persons.
  • Inadequate reimbursement for psychiatric and/or
    mental health services and its impact in
    community based systems.
  • Downsizing of geriatric beds in State Mental
    Hospitals and relocating those patients to
    community based settings.
  • Definition of medically needy as those with an
    income of 582 per month.

30
Some Potential Solutions
  • Achieving Mental Health Parity.
  • Increasing the income level for medically needy
    from 582 to 771 per month.
  • Increasing State funding for mental health
    services to non-Medicaid eligible older persons.
  • Integrating aging and mental health services at
    the community level.

31
Some Potential Solutions
  • Implementing ways of identifying frail elders at
    risk (e.g., Gatekeeper Program).
  • Educating primary health care providers on how to
    identify depression and other mental disabling
    conditions in older persons

32
  • Co-locating mental health service providers in
    primary care physicians offices.
  • Postpone premature hospitalization by funding
    counseling and other support services to
    caregivers of Alzheimer's patients.

33
  • Providing Extended Community Services to older
    persons who have been discharged from State
    Mental Hospitals
  • Increasing health promotion and disease
    prevention efforts in mental health services to
    older persons (e.g., depression screening
    programs).

34
Non-Title XIX Elders in Spokane
  • Elder Services serves approximately 1,200 at risk
    elders each year
  • Currently 378 are non Title XIX
  • Average age is 80 (youngest is 60 and oldest is
    97 with 26 who are 90 or older)
  • These elders have co-morbidity (complex problems
    that are a combination of psychiatric, physical,
    financial, social, and environmental)

35
  • Psychiatric diagnoses include schizophrenia,
    Bi-polar Disorder, Major Depression, severe
    Anxiety disorders, late life Paraphrenia,
    dementia, psychotic disorders.

36
The Spokane Aging and Mental Health Partnership
  • One Stop - No Wrong Door access to a
    comprehensive, integrated and interdisciplinary
    system of care and not just specialized
    services(I.e.,
  • medical, legal, financial).
  • A coordinated and seamless set of support
    services/resources that include in-home
    assessment, clinical case management,
    psychiatric/medication management, follow-up,
    treatment groups tailored to elders, peer
    counseling, in-home pharmacy consultations/educati
    on, special transportation, family caregiver
    support (including respite), disease
    prevention/health promotion.
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