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Transcript
Developmental Health
Psychology
Aging

Primary Aging
– “normal” senescence

Secondary Aging
– “pathological” senescence
Health during old age


Most in good health (Stats Can., ’99)
Most common chronic conditions: late
adulthood
– Arthritis, rheumatism – 42%
– High blood pressure – 33%
– Allergies – 22%
– Back problems – 17%
– Heart problems – 16%
Key ideas

Women live longer than men
– But more likely to have chronic conditions
and limitations in activities of daily living

Physical health declines, psychological
well-being improves

Determinants of health
– Health beliefs, behaviours, social
structure, SES
– Often can be changed to improve health

Despite attention paid to sickness and
treatment, self-care is the most
predominant form of care
Mental Health

Attempt to live meaningfully
– in a particular set of social and
environmental circumstances
– relying on a particular collection of
resources and supports
Self-development





self-perception
integration of various roles
striving for growth
possible commitment to something
beyond self
Life satisfaction (self image, self
esteem)
Threats to mental health

Epidemiological Catchment Area Study
– US Nat’l Inst. of Mental Health
– 18,000 structured interviews
– 5 regions across US

Dispelled 2 major myths:
– Women at greater risk.
– Older adults at greater risk
Age-Related Trends in
Mental Disorders

Lower prevalence in older than
younger adults
– all mental disorders (excluding
dementias)


Younger (18-64 years): 11-25%
Older (65+): 6-14%

Mood disorders (including
depression)
– Younger: 3-8%
– Older:
2-3%

Dementia
– Older:
6-10%
– Possible co-existence and interaction
with physical illness
Are Elderly Less Prone to
Mental Illness?

Diagnostic criteria not “age fair”
– depression symptoms different in elderly

Elderly typically visit physicians
before mental health professionals
– physical symptoms mask psychological
ones
– e.g., difficulty sleeping, changes in diet,
heart palpitations (depression)

Myths, stereotypes about aging
– must distinguish normal aging from
disease
– ageism in treatment

Cohort effects: “stigma”
Alzheimer’s Disease


Progressive, degenerative brain
disorder
Loss of memory, awareness, ability to
control body functions

First reported in 1907
– Shrinkage of cortex
– Large masses of amyloid plaques

Spherical protein deposits outside of nerve
cells
– Neurofibrillary tangles

Twisted protein filaments inside neurons
– Spread from bottom (midbrain) to top
(cortex)


Plaques, tangles present in normal
aging brain
In Alzheimer’s: excessive, interfere
with communication between neurons
Prevalence



Rare under 50
6-10% over 65
30-50% over 85
Symptoms






Permanent forgetting of recent events
Unable to do routine tasks
Forget simple words
Confusion in familiar locations
Forget what numbers mean
Put things in inappropriate places
– Watch in fishbowl


Rapid, dramatic mood swings
Loss of language, communication skills
Causes


Very little known
Possibly:
– Genetic factors (permitting tangles to
form)
– Environment (sporadic AD – no family
history; possible toxins)
– Build up of plaques in body, free radicals
in brain
Risk Factors

Age
Family history
Brain damage (accident)

Predictors: Kentucky Nun Study


– “richness” of early writing
Treatment





Anti-oxidants
Enzyme-blocking agents (prevent
plaques)
Genetic engineering (promote neuron
growth)
Respite care: caregiver stress
Behaviour Modification (activities of
daily living)




Physical activity
Social involvement
Good nutrition
Calm structured environment
Coping with AD

Patient
– Aware of changes
– Shame, self image, fear of desertion
– Behavioural changes (stages)

Caregiver: physical, psychological,
social
– 70% family members (female usually)
– 50% severe stress

Caregiver Stress
– Physically exhausting: constant vigilance
– Psychological effects
Grief: adjust to gradual loss
 Increasing social isolation
 Stigma: cover-up, try to avoid social
interactions
 Stress: severity depends on availability of
social support (respite care, counselling,
support groups)
