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Quality of care
varies for older adults with depression

By Jessica Martin

Aug. 3, 2006 -- When thinking about the well-being of
older adults,
most people focus on medical care, but mental health care is a growing,
pressing concern for older adults and their families. "At least one in
five older adults suffer from a mental disorder and experts in
geriatric mental health anticipate an 'unprecedented explosion' of
older adults with disabling mental disorder," says Enola K. Proctor,
Ph.D., a mental health care expert and professor of social work at
Washington University in St. Louis.
"While older adults may receive adequate medical and
psychiatric
care, they rarely receive the care necessary to deal with the general
'problems with living,' or social stresses. These psychosocial
problems, such as isolation and family stress, may exacerbate
psychiatric problems, depression in particular, and contribute to
functional decline."
Just as the quality of medical care has become a major
national
concern, the quality of mental health care has become a primary focus
of the Institute of Medicine and other national policy groups. In a new
study published in the current issue of The Journal of Behavioral
Health Services & Research (Vol.
33), Proctor and colleagues examined the quality of follow-up care for
186 patients discharged from the geropsychiatric unit of a large urban
hospital after treatment for depression.
The study, "Quality of Care for Depressed Elders in
Post-Acute Care:
Variations in Needs Met Through Services," assessed the quality of
psychiatric, medical, functional and psychosocial care. Psychosocial
care includes socialization, counseling and casework services for
dealing with family, housing, financial and social problems. The study
results show:
• Almost three fourths of the patients had their needs
for follow-up psychiatric care met.
• Eighty percent of the patients received the necessary
electroconvulsive therapy and psychotropic medication monitoring and
supervision for cognitive impairment.
• Nearly all patients reported receiving services to
meet their
needs for functional dependency, including help with meals, toileting
and ambulation.
• Urban elders received better psychiatric care than did
rural elders.
• Elders in worse physical health received poorer
psychiatric care.
• Follow-up care for psychosocial problems was poorest;
about one
third of patients needing such care received no services in this area
by six weeks postdischarge.
"Psychosocial problems or social stresses may be
perceived by
elders, family members and providers as less pressing than their
functional abilities or their psychiatric and medical illnesses,"
Proctor says. "Psychosocial services are unlikely to be widely known or
well understood by older adults, may be stigmatized, and are less often
covered by insurance."
Findings of this study show that the health and mental
health
professionals who serve older adults should be more attentive to their
psychosocial needs.
"Older adults who experience social, economic and family
problems
should be linked with social service agencies that are equipped to meet
their psychosocial needs," she says.
The study also indicates that while service providers
addressed most
psychiatric needs, older adults with more medical illness received
poorer psychiatric care, suggesting that medical illness may overshadow
— for providers, patients and families alike — elders' mental health
needs.
"While medical needs cannot be ignored, physicians and
other health
providers who work with older adults should address the needs of the
older adult as a whole person," Proctor says. "Meeting an individual's
psychiatric and psychosocial conditions can contribute to well-being
and recovery, and the professionals who work with older adults should
be trained to assess and respond to these needs."
Study co-authors are: Nancy Morrow-Howell, Ph.D.,
professor of
social work at Washington University; Mi Jin Lee, M.S.W., graduate
social work student at Washington University; Jessica Gledhill, M.S.W.,
staff member at Family and Children Services in Tulsa, Okla.; and Wayne
Blinne, M.A., staff member at Center for Mental Health Services at
Washington University.
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