GEY4612_M6_mental_health
Allison Uzzle
Created on November 16, 2023
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Transcript
GEY4612
Mental Health
Mental Illness
Good Mental Health
Studying mental health in adults focuses on context- Does the behavior interfere with daily functioning?
Adults and Mental Health
Where does one end and the other begin?
Characteristics of “mentally healthy” people (1980):
- Positive attitude toward self
- Accurate perception of reality
- Autonomy and mastery of the environment
- Personality balance
- Growth and self-actualization
Defining Mental Health
- Difficult to define
- Expectations of behavior change over time, situation, and age
- For older people, “abnormal” may be helpful in some cases
- Psychopathology
- The study of mental disorders
- General term for any mental or behavioral disorder
Defining Mental Health
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Defining Mental Health
- Viewing adults’ behavior from a lifespan perspective
- Accounts for differences between younger and older people
- Two patients, one old and one young:
- Lack of sleep and energy
- Changes in appetite
- Feeling down
- Would you evaluate them identically?
Life-Span Approach
Sociocultrual Forces & Life-Cycle Factors
Biological & Psychological Forces
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Life-Span Approach
- Ethnicity
- Describe feelings in different ways
- What is/isn’t appropriate to share with strangers
- Gender
- Similar issues as ethnicity
- Differences in prevalence and symptoms
- Women experience depression twice as often as men
- Men who are depressed more likely to commit suicide
Ethnicity and Gender
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Mental Health in Adulthood
- One of the most common psychological problems in adults
- The age of onset is 20s, the average age at diagnosis is 32
- Women 2x as likely to be diagnosed
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Depression
Fact: depression rates decline over time
- <5% of older adults living in the community
- 13% of those requiring home health care
- Chronic illness, nursing home residents, family caregivers
Myth: Most older adults are depressed
Depression
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- Dysphoria
- Feeling down or blue
- Age differences in how dysphoria is expressed
- Physical symptoms
- Insomnia, changes in appetite, fatigue, headaches, pain
- Diagnosis
- Symptoms must be present for at least two weeks
Depression Symptoms
Depression Assessment
Most scales developed for younger adults include items assessing physical symptoms
- Beck Depression Inventory
- Feelings and physical symptoms
- Scales that don’t ask about physical symptoms
- Geriatric Depression Scale
- Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale
Biological
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- Interpretation of uncontrollable events; causes feelings of helplessness and hopelessness
- Psychological effects of different types of losses
- Genetics, brain changes, imbalance in neurotransmitters
- Low levels of serotonin, norepinephrine, BDNF
Cognitive-Behavioral
Psychosical
What Causes Depression?
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Antidepressants
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Types of Treatments
Depression Treatment
Changes in situation may change your appraisal
Evaluate the event
Psychotherapy
BehaviorTherapy
Cognitive Behavior Therapy
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Categorize the event
Antidepressants
- Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI)
- Boost serotonin levels with fewest side effects
- Tricyclic antidepressants
- Most effective in younger and middle-aged people
- Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO)
- Used only when other options don’t work
Psychotherapy
- Can be used on its own for less severe depression, used with medication in severe depression
- Behavior therapy: attempts to alter behavior, without necessarily addressing underlying causes
- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT): attempts to change the way people think
Behavior Therapy
- Behavior therapy
- Assumes people don’t get enough reinforcement from their environment
- Goal = increasing good things that happen to them
- Increase activities and decrease negative thoughts
- Family and friends instructed to reward positivity
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
- Assumes people have negative beliefs about self
- Recognize negative thoughts, then evaluate self, world, future, more realistically
- Homework assignments reinforce new behaviors
- Effective for most people, especially older adults
- Differences in treatment based on age
- Medication
- Medication interactions
- Dosage and efficacy different for adults at different ages
- Psychotherapy
- Adapted for unique needs of older adults
- Education
Age and Treatment
- Challenges with older adults
- Getting them to seek treatment can be difficult
- Believe that some symptoms are part of getting older
- Mental health professionals under- or misdiagnose because of symptom overlap
Age and Treatment
- Based on fear and uneasiness, interfere with social functioning, relationships, work
- Severe anxiety for no apparent reason
- Specific phobias about places/things
- Obsessive-compulsive disorders
- Prevalence
- Affects >18% of adults, more common in women
Anxiety Disorders
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Anxiety Disorders
- Symptoms
- Some overlap with depression
- Dry mouth, sweating, insomnia, hyperventilating, etc
- Causes
- Difficult to pinpoint a single cause, stressful events
- For older adults – related to majornegative life events and health
Anxiety Disorders
- Treatment
- Medication (anti-anxiety drugs)
- Moderately effective, requires careful monitoring in older adults because of side effects
- Psychotherapy
- CBT, relaxation therapy, meditation
- Effective
- Bipolar disorder
- Alternating between depression (lows) and activity (highs)
- Exact causes unknown, but genes strongly implicated
- If your twin has bipolar, you have a 70% chance of having it
- Can be managed with medications (i.e., lithium)
- Psychotherapy not as effective, but can help
- Dysthymic disorder
- Less severe, chronic form of depression
- Diagnosis requires two-year history of depressed mood
- Seasonal affective disorder
- People with good mental health have depressive symptoms during winter
- Ranges from 1.4% in FL to 10% in Alaska
- Light therapy
Other Mood Disorders
- Older adults are especially susceptible to delirium because they take more medications
- Severity related to underlying physiological problem
- Most cases can be cured (1/3 of cases preventable)
- Treat physical problems/symptoms
- Confusion and disorientation can be helped by interacting with a familiar person
Delirium – changes in consciousness and cognition, occurs rapidly
- Difficulty with attention, memory, orientation, confusion
- What causes delirium?
- Medical conditions
- Stroke, cardiovascular disease, etc.
- Medication side effects
- Substance intoxication or withdrawal
Other Mood Disorders
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- Sociocultural forces
- Social norms influence behavior and how we interpret it
- Cultural differences
- Life-cycle factors
- Behavior affected by past life experiences
- Middle-aged and older adults going back to school
- Older adults hesitant to share personal info
- Biological forces
- Physical changes affect behavior and present as psychological problems
- Psychological forces
- Normative changes can mimic mental disorders
- Personal relationships changing in older adults