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Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

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Page 1: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Health Status of Older Adults(Mental Disorders)

Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Page 2: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Mortality

Page 3: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Chronic Health Conditions

Page 4: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Sensory Impairments and Oral Health

Page 5: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Percent of Medicare Beneficiaries Reporting Difficulty with IADLs or ADLs by Age, 2004

Data Source: Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey

Per

cent

(%

)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

65-74 75-84 85 years and over

IADL Only 1 to 2 ADLs 3 to 6 ADLs

Page 6: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Dietary Quality

Page 7: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Cigarette Smoking

Page 8: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Drinking

Page 9: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Respondent-Assessed Health Status

Page 10: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Compression of Morbidity Hypothesis (Fries, 1980):

As life expectancy increases the onset of chronic disease, infirmity or disability are not only postponed but

compressed into a shorter time period nearer the end of life

years2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Onset of illness Death or disability

2006: 2.66% decrease in disability /year

Page 11: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

20-22%

Page 12: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Mental Disorders in Late Life

1. MD continues or reoccurs

2. Life time of stressors MD

3. Develop disorder in later life

Page 13: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 15: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 16: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Mental Health Among Persons Age 65 and Over by Race/Ethnicity (2004-2005)

0 1 2 3 4 5 6

Visited a mental healthprofessional during the past

12 months

Serious mental illness

Hispanic White non-Hispanic Black non-Hispanic

Percent (%)

Data Source: National Health Interview Survey

Page 17: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 18: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

¾!!

¾!!75%!!!

75%!!!

Page 19: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 20: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Poor Quality of Care for Older Adults with Mental Disorders

• Increased risk for inappropriate medication treatment (Bartels, et al., 1997, 2002)

1 in 5 older persons given an inappropriate prescription (Zhan, 2001)

• Less likely to be treated with psychotherapy (Bartels, et al., 1997)

• Lower quality of general health care and associated increased mortality (Druss, 2001)

Page 21: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 22: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Expenditures on NIMH Newly Funded Grants

0

50

100

150

200

250

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000Fiscal Year

Total NIMHGrants

AgingGrants

8% 7% 8% 8% 9% 6%

NIMH, 2001

Mill

ions

of

Dolla

rs

Page 23: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

What is most commonly diagnosedmental disorder among older adults???

More mental illness than other age groups???

Page 24: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 25: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

2:1 females to males

Page 26: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Specific anxiety disorders include the following:

general anxiety disorder (GAD)panic attacks

phobias obsessive compulsive disorder post-traumatic stress disorder

Page 27: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Anxiety:

-- Necessary part of life! (transitional: adjustment)

-- Warns of danger-- Can stimulate and lead to productivity

Persistent anxiety …not good

Page 28: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Transitional AnxietyTransitional Anxiety:

-- decreased self-confidence-- fearfulness-- mild concentration decline-- worry related to home, belongings, friends, pets Couple of days to couple of weeks

Transitional Anxiety Disorder

-- interferes with ADL-- intensity is out of proportion to the event-- duration of anxiety episode is out of proportion to the event Couple of days to couple of weeks

Anxiety Disorder

Page 29: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

FACTORS COMPLICATING THE DIAGNOSIS OF ANXIETY IN OLDER ADULTS

Page 30: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Comorbidity of Mental Illness-- Older Adults

Page 31: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 32: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Panic Attacks (???)sudden, distinct episodes of intense anxiety

• usually a hx of attacks when younger• relatively rare for attacks to begin for the first time after age 55

(usually milder with fewer panic symptoms and less agoraphobia:

fear of open spaces)Phobias (.5%)

specific phobia: fear of a specific person, animal, place, object, event, or situation that results in symptoms of anxiety.

social phobias: fears associated with social situations. The usual fear is of behaving inappropriately in a certain situation and feeling

incompetent or embarrassed.

obsessive compulsive disorder (1.5%)having persistent thoughts (obsessions) that cause anxiety, and then

behaving (compulsions) in ways to decrease the anxiety (< than 1 hr a day).

post-traumatic stress disorder (???)experienced (either as a witness or a victim) a traumatic event and

reacted with feelings of fear and helplessness.

Others

Page 33: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

unrealistic or excessive worry not related to a particular problem or event

Related to vague fears about losing control, fear of failure, fear of death

• fatigue • muscle tension • trouble sleeping through the night panic attacks• difficulty concentrating on a task • feeling irritable or on edge

1) Chronic anxiety that persists for more than 6 months2) be accompanied by decreases in activities or some sort of

impairment3) be caused by more than one worry (ex: intense worry over

financial matters or a medical illness alone, even with all the associated symptoms, does not mean someone has GAD)

General anxiety disorder (GAD)

Page 34: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

• Hughes’ OCD was not treated• Became a recluse• Died– largely of starvation - 71 yrs old,

1905 - 1976)

Howard Hughes

“The Aviator” Draws Attention to Anxiety Disorders in Older AdultsUntil recently, anxiety disorders were believed to decline with age

Page 35: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Depression

Reactive-Exogenous triggered by an obvious event

Endogenous No trigger No obvious event

Page 36: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

•Anhedonia (experience pleasure)•Weight gain or loss•Hypersomnia, insomnia• Fatigue, loss of energy• feelings of worthlessness guilty• difficulty concentrating

Page 37: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 38: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Indicator 18 - Depressive Symptoms

Page 39: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Clinical Depression ~ 5%:

• Depressed mood most of the day, nearly everyday • Loss of pleasure in daily activities • Significant weight loss or gain • Change in mobility (slowing down or nervous gestures)• Feelings of worthlessness, self reproach, excessive guilt • Diminished ability to concentrate • Suicidal thoughts

Steffens et al. (2000) : depression in older adults was 4.4% in women and 2.7% in men

Page 40: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

When depression occurs in late life:

1. relapse of an earlier depression

2. If first time occurrence may be triggered by another illness, hospitalization, or placement in a nursing home

3. Unlike the onset of depression in younger adults depression is thought to be a psychological disorder triggered by specific life stressors (loss of loved one)

Page 41: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Attitudes Of Older Adults Towards DepressionAmericans aged 65:

• 68% know little or almost nothing about depression

• 38% believe that depression is a "health" problem

• more likely than any other group to "handle it themselves“

• 42% would seek help from a health professional

National Mental Health Association, 1996

Page 42: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 43: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 44: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Peak suicide rates: goes up continuously for men / at midlife for women, then declines

1/3 of older men saw their primary care physician in the week before completing suicide; 70% within the prior month

Page 45: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Leading Causes of Suicide Among females,

2001

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

10-14 15-19 20-64 65+

Pe

rce

nt

of

all

su

icid

es

by

ag

e

Firearm Suffocation Poisoning Fall-jump Drowning Cut/pierce

Source: National Vital Statistics System - Mortality, NCHS, CDC.

Page 46: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Leading Causes of Suicide Among Males, 2001

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

10-14 15-19 20-64 65+

Pe

rce

nt

of

all s

uic

ide

s b

y a

ge

Firearm Suffocation Poisoning Other

Source: National Vital Statistics System - Mortality, NCHS, CDC.

Page 47: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 48: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Nursing Homes: The Primary Provider of Institution-Based Care for Older Persons with Mental Disorders

• 65-80% of Nursing Home Residents-A Diagnosable Mental Disorder(vs 20% in older adults at home)

• Among the Most Common Disorders– Dementia – ***Depression (as high as 50%!!!)– Anxiety Disorders and Psychotic Disorders

(Burns & Taube, 1990, 1991, Rovner et al., 1990)

Page 49: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Unmet Need for Mental Health Services

in Nursing Homes

• Over one month: 4.5% of mentally ill nursing home residents received mental health services (Burns et al., 1993)

• Over one year: 19% in need of mental health services receive them. – Least likely: Oldest and most physically impaired

(Shea et al., Smyer et al., 1994)

Page 50: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6
Page 51: Health Status of Older Adults (Mental Disorders) Lecture 6 – Chapter 6

Decrease by 50%

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