Title: Aging
1Aging
- Or how everything falls apart.
2References and Handouts
- http//www.brown.edu/Courses/BI_278/
-
3Everything Changes
- Psychological issues
- Socioeconomic
- Physical health
- Mental Health
4The stats on elderly
- Increased 10-fold in last century
- Currently
- 35 million gt 65
- 13 population
- By 2030
- 70 million
- 1/5 Americans gt 65
- 1/11 gt 85
5More stats
- Gender (percentage women)
- gt 65 58
- gt 85 70
- Ethnicity
- Will be more diverse
- Currently 85 white
- By 2050, 64
6Everything Changes
- Psychological issues
- Socioeconomic
- Physical health
- Mental Health
7Psychological issues
- Aging has unique
- Challenges
- Life stresses
8Ex. Erickson
Stage Age Basic Conflict
Oral-Sensory Birth-12/18mo. Trust v. Mistrust
Muscular-anal 18 mo 3 yrs Autonomy v. shame/doubt
Locomotor 3-6 yrs Initiative vs. guilt
Latency 6-12 yrs Industry vs. inferiority
Adolescence 12-18yrs Identity vs. role confusion
Young Adulthood 19-40 yrs Intimacy vs. isolation
Middle Adulthood 40-65 yrs Generativity vs. stagnation
Maturity 65-death Ego Integrity vs. despair
9Stage 8 Maturity
- Age Late Adulthood -- 65 years to death
- Conflict Integrity vs. Despair
- Important Event Reflection on and acceptance of
one's life
10Stage 8 Maturity
- Elements for a positive outcomeThe adult feels
a sense of fulfillment about life and accepts
death as an unavoidable reality. - Elements for a negative outcomeIndividuals who
are unable to obtain a feeling of fulfillment and
completeness will despair and fear death.
11Other development approaches
- Psychodynamic
- Formation versus elaboration of psychic processes
- Levinson1
- Structure building and changing
- Periods of transition
1 Levinson, D. (1986). A conception of adult
development. American Psychologist, 413-13.
12Unique challenges of the elderly
- Losses
- Disablement
- Driving
- Health concerns
13What do the elderly worry about?
National Council On Aging, 2000
14Everything Changes
- Psychological issues
- Socioeconomic
- Physical health
- Mental Health
15Socioeconomic changes
- Retirement
- Finances
- Social security
- Medicare
- Living situations
16Retirement
- Median age
- Men 62.7
- Women 62.6
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18Finances
- 65
- net worth 92,399
- White 181,000
- African American 13,000
- annual household income 22,812
19Percent Living in Poverty
- Elderly 12.1
- 3 points below general pop
20Living situations
- Among 65
- 80 own home
- 75 single unit/detached
- 45 live alone
- 17 elderly householder had no transportation
21Nursing Homes
- 65
- 4 (1.46 million people)
- 85
- About 192 out of every 1,000
22Everything Changes
- Psychological issues
- Socioeconomic
- Physical health
- Mental Health
23Physical Health
- Self perception
- Survey of Americans age 65 (1996-96)
- vast majority considered themselves healthy.
- Whites 74
- AAs 59.3
- Hispanics 64.9
24The 3 big killers
- Heart disease
- Cancer
- Stroke
- Mortality rates
- Hrt Dx/Stroke decr 1/3 since 1980
- Cancer up slightly
25Effects of Aging on the Body
- Bottom line
- Most of the news is bad.
- The question
- How much is inevitable?
26Examples of things we cant change
- Ocular accommodation
- Cardiac hypertrophy
- GI malabsorption/intolerances
- Loss of immunity/allergies
- Loss of brain volume
27Examples of things we can change somewhat
- Loss of skin elasticity
- Auditory acuity
- Cardiac loss of elasticity
28Examples of things we can change a lot
- Muscle Mass, Muscle/Fat Ratio
- Osteoporosis
- Functional Cognition
29Everything Changes
- Psychological issues
- Socioeconomic
- Physical health
- Mental Health
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31Why Rates in Elderly are Low?
- Greater difficulty remembering past symptoms
- Less psychologically oriented
- Greater mortality
- Cohort effect
- Sampling errors
- Instrument errors
- Diagnostic challenges
32Elderly Specific Criteria?
Diagnostic Criteria Major Depression Prevalence
AGECAT 11.4
DSM-IV 4.5
Age 65 Edmonton Canada Newman et al.
Psychological Medicine 28 1998
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35Some specific diseases
36Psychotic Disorders
37Schizophrenia
Age 1-Month 1-Year Lifetime
All 0.7 1.0 1.5
65 0.1 0.1 0.3
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39Psychosis in the Elderly
- Negative versus positive symptoms
- Look for alternative causes
- Esp. if NEW ONSET or no history
- Most common
- MEDS
- ACUTE problems infections, metabolic.
- Tumors, etc. less common
40Mood Disorders in the Elderly
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43Depression in the Elderly
- Why so low? (see earlier)
- Forme Frustres
- Pseudodementia
- Diagnosing depression in complex cases
- How to approach
44Anxiety Disorder in the Elderly
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46Anxiety Disorders
- Primary Versus Secondary
- Common Secondary Causes
- Drugs
- Medical Illness (cardiac, respiratory)
- Disorders that confuse (dementia, delirium)
47Substance Abuse in the Elderly
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49Substance Abuse
- Gender differences and drug choice
50Dementia
51Problems in Dementia Prevalence Studies
- Size of sample
- Sample composition
- Age range
- Proportion of very old
- Education
- Method for case identification
- Content of Interview
- Supplementary diagnostic information
- Diagnostic criteria (NINCDS-ADRDA v DSM)
- Prevalence Estimate
52Age Specific Prevalence
Jorms (1987)
53Stages of Dementia
- Depend on both
- Cognitive ability
- Testing
- Functional Ability
- Observe, ask.
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55Special Settings
56One-Year Prevalence of Mental Disorders in
Nursing Homes Estimates from ECA
57Differences in the Psych. Interview in the elderly
- Use of multiple sources
- Respect for confidentiality, but
- Relaxing of boundary issues
- Focus of interview
- Symptoms versus stories
- Explanations and honesty
- The power of genuine interest
58Epilogue the question you are all asking
59To stay healthy
- Pick really healthy parents
60Other things you can do
- Dont smoke
- Low-fat, high-fiber diet
- Exercised vigorously for AT LEAST 30 min ALMOST
EVERY day - Maintained a healthy weight
- Consume a moderate amount of alcohol (about one
drink per day). - All 5 80 reduction in heart attack/stroke risk
- Which then also helps cognition
Primary prevention of coronary heart disease in
women through diet and lifestyle. M. Stampfer,
et al., The New England Journal of Medicine,
2000, vol. 343, pp. 16--22