What is Mental Illness?
Late-life Mental Health
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Aging and Mental
Health • Late-Life Mental Health
Afflictions •
Livng with Late-Life Mental Illness • How Family and Friends
Can Help
Having sound mental health as an adult does not make a person
immune from psychiatric problems later in life. Elderly individuals
can also suffer from mental illness. Fortunately, these disorders
can usually be diagnosed and treated successfully; few elderly
people, however, actually seek help. Many older people simply
do not understand mental illnesses; some deny there is a problem;
others are ashamed of their problem; yet others simply dismiss
it as a result of getting older. However, proper treatment and
care can reduce or eliminate the symptoms, returning people to
functioning, happier lives.
Aging and Mental Health
Aging is a complex physical, mental, social and spiritual process.
It affects each individual differently. Some people remain alert
and active well into their 90's. Others seem old in every way
as early as their 60's. Some factors that influence the attitudes
and behaviors of older people include:
*Personality
*Physical, mental and emotional health
*Intellectual functioning
*Economic and environmental limitations
*Family relationships
*Inner motivation
These factors ultimately affect an older person's overall mental
health, causing or complicating one of several mental disorders.
Late-Life Mental Afflications
Some common mental disorders that afflict elderly people include:
Depression
Depression is a very common mental disorder. It is often mistaken
for "the blues" and therefore goes untreated. Depression
is caused by a number of factors, from chemical imbalances to
environmental influences. There are different forms of depression,
some mild, others more severe. A person with depression will
likely display one or more of the following behaviors:
* Feelings of worthlessness, hopelessness, helplessness, total
indifference and/or extreme guilt
* Prolonged sadness; unexplained crying spells
* Jumpiness or irritability
* Withdrawal from formerly enjoyable activities or relationships
* Inability to concentrate or remember details; indecisiveness
* Noticeable change in appetite with sudden weight loss or gain
* Changes in sleep patterns: constant fatigue, insomnia, early
waking, oversleeping
* Physical ailments that cannot be explained otherwise
* Thoughts of death or suicide attempts
Dementia
Dementia is a disorder marked by memory impairment and intellectual
decline and changes in comprehension and judgment, language,
recognition, behavior and personality. While these symptoms are
sometimes thought of as typical signs of growing old, in reality
they reflect underlying illnesses. Only a small portion of the
aging population, roughly 10 percent, suffers from dementia.
Some conditions that cause dementia include: Alzheimer's disease,
stroke, brain infections and tumors, Parkinson's or Huntington's
disease, depression, nutritional disorders, excessive medication,
and alcoholism.
Some of these conditions associated with dementia are not progressive;
they can be stopped or even reversed. It is therefore important
that a physician complete a thorough dementia evaluation.
Alzheimers Disease
Alzheimers disease, a leading cause of death in America, is
a form of dementia. It is a disease that causes brain cells to
die, often beginning in a part of the brain that controls memory.
As it spreads, it affects a growing number of intellectual, emotional
and behavioral abilities.
Alzheimers disease usually appears slowly and gradually. The
first symptoms include loss of recent, short-term memory and
mild personality changes, such as mild apathy or social withdrawal.
As the disease progresses, patients have trouble with abstract
thinking, handling money or other personal affairs, understanding
what they are reading or organizing their days. They may also
become irritable, troubled and less neat in appearance. In the
late stages, patients become seriously confused and disoriented,
show significant personality and emotional changes, develop incontinence
and ultimately become unable to care for themselves.
Scientists have been unable to pinpoint the exact cause of
Alzheimers disease, but they are routinely learning more and
more about this devastating illness. Although Alzheimers itself
cannot be cured, there are significant treatments to help control
the symptoms.
Living with Late-Life Mental Illness
Because of late-life health conditions, elderly people are more
likely to require a variety of medications. These medications
can interact with each other in a negative way, sometimes compounded
by alcohol use or abuse. Furthermore, the illness for which these
medications are used can result in symptoms that resemble certain
mental illnesses.
It is important that elderly people be aware of their medications
and overall physical health status and work closely with their
physicians to find regimens that are safe and effective.
How Family and Friends Can Help
Reaching elder years can bring about changes - physical, mental,
emotional and social - that can affect one's life. Many are not
ready to accept this change, and it can therefore be a difficult
experience. Family and friends can help by offering emotional
support - understanding, patience, affection and encouragement.
Family and friends can also help by becoming involved in their
loved one's mental and physical well-being. This may involve
encouraging him or her to seek or to stay with treatment, going
with the patient to the doctor, or even monitoring whether the
patient is taking medication.
Caring for an elderly person can be demanding, stressful and
emotionally taxing on family and friends. Many organizations
are dedicated to providing support for these people as well.
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