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| JNHA volume 7, number 6, 2003 | ||
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Neurosciences |
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| Practical psychological management of old age psychosis | ||
| L. Agüera-Ortiz1, B. Reneses-Prieto2 1. Psychiatry Department. University Hospital 12 de Octubre, Associate Professor of Psychiatry. Complutense University, Madrid, Spain ; 2. Psychiatry Department. University Hospital Clínico San Carlos, Madrid, Spain. Abstract: Late-onset forms of psychosis have been the object of increasing
interest in recent years. Despite the fact that there are still many obscure
areas, significant advances in the pathophysiology, delimitation of risk
factors, clinical presentation, neuropsychology and the pharmacological
treatment have been made. Nevertheless, the psychological aspects of both
aetiology and treatment of these late forms of psychosis have received
much less attention than the rest. In contrast with that, the clinician
is confronted with the need to manage patients that are reluctant to take
medications and in which the outcome of pharmacological treatments is
not always optimal. The elderly psychotic patient should not be excluded
from the possibility of receiving any kind of psychological help. He may
benefit from adaptations of different psychotherapeutic measures that
can include the more classical techniques as psychodynamic oriented and
behavioural-cognitive therapies or the newer forms of treatment specially
designed for the aged, as reminiscence or psychomotor therapy. In any
case, to obtain any result the patient needs to be managed in a way that
goes well further the prescription of a neuroleptic drug. In this paper
we review some of the most important psychological cues for the understanding
of the elderly psychotic patient. Furthermore, we divide the therapeutic
relationship over the time in three parts: The initial contact, the central
phase and the termination. We offer some keys for the practical management
of the patient in each of these phases, with special attention to the
adherence to treatment and early identification of treatment-emergent
complications like depressive symptoms or hypochondriac concerns.
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