
Psychiatr News November 18, 2005
Volume 40, Number 22, page 30
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
Perceptions of Elderly Affect Care They Receive
Eve Bender
Societal attitudes toward elderly people with mental
illnessregardless of cultureare often stigmatizing and
pessimistic, according to one proponent of "successful
aging."
As the number of elderly minorities with mental illness increases
substantially over the coming years, so too will the demand for culturally
sensitive mental health services by psychiatrists.
Unfortunately, each minority group faces barriers to comprehensive
psychiatric treatment, which include lack of insurance, stigma, and the cost
of care, according to a group of psychiatrists who treat and conduct research
with patients from diverse ethnic backgrounds. They spoke at the APA Institute
on Psychiatric Services in San Diego last month.
"Whether we like it or not, most of us are going to be geriatric
psychiatrists within the next few decades," said Dilip Jeste, M.D.,
Estelle and Edgar Levi Chair in Aging, director of the Sam and Rose Stein
Institute for Research on Aging, and Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and
Neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego.
He pointed out that while there were about 6 million people over age 65
with psychiatric disorders in 1990, that number is expected to top 15 million
in 2030.
Important issues to consider are how race and ethnicity play a role in risk
for mental illness and whether an increased risk for a particular mental
disorder is influenced by environment, genes, or the interaction between the
two, he noted.
For instance, the proportion of people with vascular dementia living in
India and Japan is higher than in Western countries, and the World Health
Organization has declared that 2 of every 3 people with dementia will soon
live in developing countries, Jeste
said.
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From left: Rodrigo Muñoz, M.D., Mary Roessel, M.D., Jagannathan
Srinivasaraghavan, M.D., Warachal Faison, M.D., and Dilip Jeste, M.D., spoke
about the importance of cultural competence in the treatment of elderly
minority patients with mental illness.
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By contrast, elderly people living in rural India may have a lower risk for
Alzheimer's disease than their counterparts in Western countries. Jeste cited
the research of Mary Ganguli, M.D., M.P.H., who came to this conclusion after
studying a sample of 2,700 elderly Indian villagers. She also found a low
prevalence of APO-E4, a gene variant associated with Alzheimer's.
Cultural Differences in Care, Attitudes
Across cultures there are differences in the quality of health care,
societal attitudes toward the elderly in general, and attitudes toward elderly
people with mental illness, Jeste noted.
Older people living in some Asian communities "may have an advantage
in the sense that the elderly tend to be better respected than they are in
Western cultures."
He described the concept of "successful aging," which occurs
across many cultures and is characterized by socialization, engaging in
physical activity, adapting well to change, and being satisfied with life.
Physical exercise and mental stimulation are essential to achieve successful
aging, he said.
There is evidence that even older people living with physical illnesses and
serious mental illness such as schizophrenia can achieve successful aging, he
said, which flies in the face of dominant attitudes toward elderly people with
mental illness in our culturethat they are "not worth wasting
time and energy on" because they are in advanced stages of life, and
nothing more can be done for them. "Societal and scientific attitudes
toward aging need to change," Jeste declared.
Stigma, Misdiagnosis Impede Treatment
A number of factors, including stigma and lack of insurance coverage, keep
many African-American elderly from seeking mental health care, according to
Warachal Faison, M.D., clinical director of the Alzheimer's Research and
Clinical Programs at the Medical University of South Carolina and assistant
director of the Institute for Research Minority Training on Mental Health and
Aging.
"If you are African American and have a mental illness," she
said, "you are considered to be a double minority." Faison is also
vice chair of APA's Committee on Ethnic Minority Elderly.
African Americans who seek mental health services are more likely to be
misdiagnosed with psychosis, less likely to be diagnosed with depression, and
less likely to receive a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor than are
patients from other ethnic backgrounds, according to Faison.
Elderly African Americans are also more likely than whites to be
misdiagnosed with dementia and Alzheimer's disease, she noted.
Faison cited research by J. Scott Roberts, Ph.D., of Boston University
School of Medicine, who in 2003 found that African Americans were more poorly
informed about Alzheimer's disease than were Caucasians. For instance, African
Americans were much more likely than whites to believe that Alzheimer's is a
normal part of aging.
Faison emphasized that there is a dearth of African Americans participating
in clinical trials and an inadequate number of African-American investigators.
A reversal of this trend will result in higher-quality treatment interventions
and screening tools for older African Americans with mental illness, she
noted.
According to Mary Roessel, M.D., a staff psychiatrist at the Santa Fe
Indian Health Services Hospital and Clinic in Santa Fe, N.M., access to health
care providers is difficult for many American-Indian elders. "Because
most of our elders live on reservations, lack of transportation is a real
issue for them," she said.
Unlike in many Western cultures, older American Indians are respected and
looked to as keepers of cultural knowledge and tradition, she noted.
However, it is not uncommon for American-Indian elders to be financially
exploited, abused, or neglected by younger family members charged with caring
for them.
While working with American-Indian elders who served in World War II and
the Korean War, she has noticed a high prevalence rate of posttraumatic stress
disorder. "Many had never sought help before and have been suffering for
as long as 50 years," said Roessel.
It is crucial that American Indians have access to culturally sensitive
care and are provided with an interpreter, if necessary. At the hospital where
she works, "there are native speakers who are available to conduct a
mental status exam or psychiatric interview" in the patient's native
language, Roessel said.
In American-Indian families, she explained, there is usually one family
member who is designated to take care of an elderly relative and "will
come to the office to offer more information about the patient or serve as an
interpreter."
Health privacy laws have sometimes been detrimental to treating
American-Indian elders with mental illness, especially in cases where overly
cautious clinicians "isolate patients" by barring family members
from treatment sessions, which is not necessary, Roessel said.
It may also be beneficial to combine various aspects of American-Indian
healing traditions with mental health treatment, she noted.
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