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Counseling with Older Adults

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Does it care about how older people maintain healthy life? ... Thus, gerontology addresses anything that is related to aging and older people. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Counseling with Older Adults


1
Counseling with Older Adults
  • Carl Renold, Ph.D.
  • CSUF
  • Human Services and Gerontology

2
Gerontology
  • Although aging begins before birth, most people
    studying gerontology are concerned with change in
    middle age and later life. Then, is gerontology
    only about older people and later life?
    Definitely not. Gerontology is about everybody
    and for everybody. Does it deal with dying
    elderly persons? Yes, but it is also concerned
    about family members who deal with dying parents.
    Does it care about how older people maintain
    healthy life? Yes, but it also examines what
    kinds of earlier behaviors and environments
    affect health in later life. Thus, gerontology
    addresses anything that is related to aging and
    older people.
  • About the story of life

3
Introduction
  • Psychotherapy with older adults has been
    performed, studied, and discussed for the past
    eighty years. Generally, both case studies and
    controlled outcome designs have yielded evidence
    of the efficacy of psychotherapy with older
    adults (Knight, Kelly, Gatz, 1992).
  • The literature suggests that older adults are
    responsive to a wide variety of therapeutic
    approaches ( see, for example, Zarit Knight,
    1996). More recent evidence suggests that older
    clients, when given appropriate treatments by
    competent clinicians, improve from
    psychotherapeutic treatment at rates comparable
    to younger adults (Scogin McElreath, 1994).

4
Early Gerontology
  • The loss-deficit model of aging, which portrays
    the normative course of later life as a series of
    losses and the typical response as depression,
    was an outgrowth of the selected experience of
    practitioners, who generally work with older
    adults who are ill, depressed, or experiencing
    social problems.

5
Positive Aging
  • Conversely, researchers examining the more
    positive aspects of aging began to adopt
    conceptual and methodological advances from
    lifespan psychology. Lifespan developmental
    psychology is based on sequential designs that
    combine aspects of cross-sectional and
    longitudinal methods to make it possible to
    separate developmental aging effects from

6
Lifespan developmental
  • cohort differences, which are the ways that
    successive generational groups differ from one
    another, and from time effects, which can be
    related to social influences that affect everyone
    at about the same time or which can be specific
    to changes in the research study itself.

7
Maturational Changes with Aging
  • Slowing. There are several important cognitive
    changes that occur with aging, one of which is
    cognitive slowing. The slowing that occurs in all
    cognitive tasks where speed of response is a
    factor is considered the most pervasive cognitive
    change in developmental aging ( Salthouse, 1985).
    While reaction time has been sped up in older
    adults through practice, exercise, and other
    interventions, age differences are seldom
    completely eliminated. Salthouse (1985) argued
    that the probable locus of slowing is in the
    central nervous system. With aging, the speed
    with which a signal is conducted through the
    nervous system is slowed. Conduction velocity
    decreases by as much as 30 over the life span,
    with reports of 10-40 decreases on average

8
Changes (continued)
  • A second cognitive change associated with aging
    occurs in the realm of intelligence. For the
    purposes of this model, it is useful to break up
    intelligence into a two-factor distinction
    proposed by Cattell and elaborated by Horn (see
    Labouvie-Vief, 1985, for a review).

9
Fluid Intelligence
  • Fluid intelligence, usually measured within the
    field of aging by tasks that involve a speeded or
    timed component, shows clear evidence of change
    with developmental aging . Inferential reasoning,
    (as assessed by questions that ask what comes
    next in a series), is a part of fluid
    intelligence in this sense.

10
Crystallized Intelligence
  • Crystallized Intelligence, measured by tests
    assessing general fund of information and
    vocabulary, shows little change as a result of
    the aging process until age 70 or later (Schaie,
    1996).

11
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12
  • Declines in average levels of mental abilities
    after age 70 are observed, but are not universal
    nor global and are difficult to untangle from the
    changes which could be due to early stages of
    dementing illnesses and other illness-related
    declines (Schaie, 1996).

13
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14
Mind as Computer
  • Rybash, Hoyer Roodin (1986) advanced some
    intriguing notions about the course of cognitive
    development across the adult lifespan. Drawing on
    the information processing "mind as computer"
    metaphor, they argue that increased experience
    can be seen as operating like an "expert system"
    program. With accumulation of experience, older
    adults have a considerable store of knowledge
    about how things are and how things work,
    especially in their individual area of expertise,
    informed by work experience, family experiences,
    and other interpersonal relationships.

15
Memory
  • Memory is perhaps the most difficult topic in
    the study of cognitive changes in late life. What
    is known about memory now would suggest that
    differences between current younger and older
    adults in memory performance are not large when
    material is meaningful and relevant to the older
    adult and the older adult is motivated to learn
    (Botwinick, 1983 Craik Trehub, 1982 Hultsch
    Dixon, 1990).

16
Personality
  • The last fifteen years have seen valuable
    research conducted on personality development in
    adulthood and later life. The work of Costa,
    McCrae, and associates in the Baltimore
    Longitudinal Study on Aging (McCrae Costa,
    1984 Costa McCrae, 1988) using self report
    measures of personality and a nomothetic model of
    personality measurement has supported stability
    of personality across the adult lifespan in the
    "Big Five" personality factors
    introversion/extroversion, neuroticism, openness
    to experience, dependability and agreeableness.

17
Personality
  • These results are strong evidence supporting the
    concept that these personality dimensions are
    stable across years and even decades and that
    these personality factors stay roughly the same
    through much of adulthood and into the early part
    of old age.

18
Emotional Development
  • Emotional changes over the adult lifespan are a
    topic of considerable importance for
    psychotherapists working with older adults. At
    the psychobiological level, Woodruff (1985) has
    concluded that older adults are more difficult to
    arouse but also have more difficulty returning to
    a state of calm once aroused.
  • Recent research has also led to new ways of
    thinking about the importance of emotional
    experience to older adults. Whereas previously
    older adults were thought to become emotionally
    disengaged, Carstensen (1992) has found that
    adults increasingly focus on emotionally close
    relationships as they get older, while casual
    relationships become less important.

19
Cohort Differences
  • Much of social gerontology could be summarized as
    the discovery that many of the differences
    between the old and the young that society has
    attributed to the aging process are due, in fact,
    to cohort effects. Cohort differences are
    explained by membership in a birth-year- defined
    group that is socialized into certain abilities,
    beliefs, attitudes, and personality dimensions
    that will stay stable as it ages and that
    distinguishes that cohort from others born
    earlier and later. For example, later born
    cohorts in twentieth century America have more
    years of formal schooling than earlier born
    groups.

20
Context of Older Adults
  • Another source of potential adaptation in
    psychotherapy with older adults is the need to
    understand the distinctive social milieu of older
    adults in the U.S. in the late 20th century. This
    context includes specific environments (age
    segregated housing, age segregated social and
    recreational centers, the aging services network,
    age segregated long-term care, and so on) as well
    as specific rules for older adults (Medicare
    regulations, Older Americans' Act regulations,
    conservatorship law and so forth).

21
Disability
  • Working with older adults often means working
    with individuals who are chronically and/or
    physically disabled and who are fighting to
    adjust to these problems. Thus, the
    psychotherapist working with older adults will
    often learn a great deal about chronic illnesses
    and their psychological impact, pain and pain
    management, adherence to medical treatment,
    rehabilitation strategies, and assessing
    behavioral signs of medical reactions.

22
Diversity
  • In the United States, diversity issue is much
    more complex than in other societies where single
    race or ethnicity is the majority of the
    population different from in some formerly
    communist countries in which stratification of
    social class is not as complex as in United
    States and different from countries where gender
    role is much more conservative and traditional.

23
Grieving
  • Another specific challenge to older adults
    involves working through grief. While loved ones
    die throughout our lives, the experience is more
    common in later life. Older adults seeking help
    for depression frequently have experienced
    several deaths of loved ones in the preceding
    months or years. Grief may be a principal focus
    of therapy when there are multiple losses within
    a short period of time, when there is unresolved
    grief from losses that occurred earlier in life,
    or when the relationship with the deceased was
    problematic for some reason.
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