Study Mental Illness in old age more common than previously thought
Mental problems occur at all ages, but so far the assumption has been that older people are much less vulnerable and therefore the incidence of mental illness in old age is falling. An international research team coordinated by Professor dr. However, Martin Härter, Director of the Institute and the Department of Medical Psychology at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf (UKE), has now discovered that significantly more old people suffer from mental illnesses than previously thought. However, inadequate diagnostic procedures often fail to recognize them.
Just two months ago, US scientists had published a study that found increasing satisfaction and improved mental health in old age. But the current investigation comes here to a different result. It contradicts the assumption that the incidence of mental illness decreases in old age. About a third of the 65 to 85-year-old study participants had retrospectively suffered from a mental illness for one year, and around a quarter of the respondents showed a current mental illness, according to the UKE. The researchers published their results in the journal British Journal of Psychiatry.
medicine, age, health care and people concept - senior woman patient lying in bed at hospital wardConventional diagnostic tools unsuitable
The new, large-scale study covered the mental health of older people in six European countries using innovative diagnostic methods. "The starting point was the assumption that the valid diagnosis methods for adults are less suitable for the diagnosis of mental illnesses in the elderly," reports study leader Prof. Härter in the press release of the UKE. As a result, older people in conventional diagnostic tools would soon lose their attention and come to the conclusion that "the questions in the previous diagnostic procedures were often quite long and complicated, which additionally caused problems for older people," reports the expert.
3,100 senior citizens examined
Together with Prof. Dr. med. Sylke Andreas, Dr. Jana Volkert and Prof. Dr. med. Holger Schulz from the UKE coordinated Prof. Härter's current studies, for which a new diagnostic tool in the form of a computer-based interview with simplified sentences was first developed. Subsequently, "3,100 people between the ages of 65 and 85 were screened in Spain, the United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, Israel and Switzerland using this procedure," according to UKE. The evaluations showed that a considerable proportion of the subjects suffered from mental illnesses.
Anxiety disorders and depression are particularly common in old age
"The results show a significantly higher incidence of mental illness in the elderly than previously thought," says the UKE: Thus, a third of respondents had experienced a mental illness in the past year and in a quarter of respondents had been found a current mental illness , "The most common were anxiety disorders (17 percent) and depression (14 percent), in which the respondents were diagnosed in the past year," said the University Hospital.
More psychotherapeutic services needed for the elderly
The researchers conclude that the numbers are particularly frightening, especially against the background of health services offered to older people. Better and more reliable ways are needed to determine if older people are suffering from a mental illness. This also goes hand in hand with the urgent need to establish to date almost total absence of psychotherapeutic services for older people. In any case, it is necessary to reconsider the previous evaluation of mental health in old age. (Fp)