The elderly are most susceptible to mental illness, and they receive inadequate mental health services. The authors developed a community-based program to meet the needs of the psychiatrically impaired elderly by providing a multiplicity of indirect services to community caregivers. A psychiatrist and two clinical specialists in psychiatric nursing provide consultation, education, collaboration, and coordination to individuals and agencies dealing directly with elderly clients in the community. Evaluation of data show a high degree of consultee satisfaction, few recommendations for institutional care, satisfactory client outcomes, and a significant impact achieved by a formal educational program for community practitioners.
This paper describes psychiatric consultations in a chronic care and rehabilitation hospital. It reports that although 60% of consultation requests were for depression, only 8.6% of patients seen received a diagnosis of Affective Disorder. Many patients seen, 51.4%, did not receive a formal psychiatric diagnosis and were found not present problems in adapting to chronic disabling illnesses. These problems included difficulties with convalescent and rehabilitative tasks, manifested by pathological behaviours such as persistent denial and pseudoindependence, as well as characteristic reactions to specific catastrophic illnesses. It is important to recognize that in this population psychotropic medication should be used judiciously, and interpersonal and milieu approaches should be emphasized. It is also important for the psychiatric consultant to maintain an optimistic, therapeutic attitude in what often seem to be rather foreboding consultation settings.
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