News
& Notes > For Your Information
Older
Americans’ Mental Health Week
Mental Health and
Older Adults: Myths and Realities
The following was provided by the Older Adult Consumer
Mental Health Alliance
There are several myths concerning older adults and mental
health. In order to improve access to appropriate mental health
care for older adults these must be addressed.
|
|
MYTH
1: Older adults are like everyone else. They don’t need specialized
services.
The nation’s mental health system is geared toward people
who recognize they have a problem, seek out help, and hope to recover
for work, family, etc. Many older adults don’t fit into those
categories. They don’t seek help because they don’t
always know what is wrong except that they feel bad. Instead of
going to a mental health center for help, they trust their primary
doctor, many of whom are not confident about dealing with mental
illness or many just don’t seek help. Some may lack transportation
to centers.
Older adults need people that understand older
adults’ specific psychological needs, complex physical problems
and service supports. Older adults are more likely to have more
than one problem. Unfortunately, people over 60 often know very
little of about mental health services available and where to access
them. And most mental health workers have no idea how to reach out
to older adults.
MYTH 2: Older adults’
doctors take care of them; their needs aren’t overlooked.
While 1 in 5 older adults has a serious mental health problem only
1 in 20 gets help. In older adults, the signs and symptoms of depression,
anxiety and other mental illnesses are often entangled with physical
problems. As one older adult says, “mental illness in older
adults has many masks.” It can look like stomach problems,
lack of energy, irritability, the flu, grief, loss of weight, lack
of sleep, etc.
Therefore many older people don’t know what
is causing them to feel bad. A survey by the National Mental Health
Association shows that 68% of adults over 65 know little or nothing
about depression, so when they go to their doctor they only discuss
physical problems. Doctors miss diagnosing depression 50% of the
time. In one study in Chicago 80% of the people who committed suicide
had seen their primary care physician within a few weeks before
they died.
MYTH 3: Depression is
part of aging; older people with depression won’t get better.
This is ageism. People expect older adults to be depressed or disoriented
because of their age, their loss of family and friends or their
sense of purpose. Doctors often confirm this myth by saying things
like .... “I would be depressed too if I were in your shoes.”
This just confirms the notion that nothing can be done and those
older adults should just accept feeling bad. No wonder older adults
have the highest suicide rate of any age group. The truth is that
older adults can be helped though counseling and medication and
people over 60 have the same rate of recovery as younger people.
MYTH 4: If you have never
had a mental health problem before, you are safe.
Late life depression is more common than you might think. Many older
adults become vulnerable to depression and other mental illnesses
in connection with other physical ailments. Stroke, alcohol abuse,
Parkinson’s, cancer, arthritis, diabetes and Alzheimer’s
can all cause symptoms of clinical depression. Older adult caregivers
are at an even greater risk for depression.
MYTH 5: The effects of
mental illness among older adults really aren’t that bad.
Even though few older adults with mental illness are violent, the
effects of the illness in people over 60 are just as deadly and
costly to society. Older adults commit suicide at the highest rate
of any age group. Every day 17 adults over 60 commit suicide. For
those who continue to live with mental illness, there are serious
consequences. Older adults with mental illness are more likely to
have physical problems and will spend 2-3 times more trying to deal
with those problems and stay sick longer. People with depression
are more likely to have strokes, heart problems and need nursing
care early.
MYTH 6: The system is
doing all it can to help older adults with mental illness.
There are few mental health programs nationwide that have all the
necessary components to serve older adults in their communities.
Where these programs do exist they have been overwhelmed with participants.
The need for these programs is great. Medicare doesn’t really
help and actually discriminates against those with mental health
problems. Medicare only pays 50% of the cost of outpatient mental
health treatment, but pays 80% for physical health treatment. This
adds to the present stigma and results in more expensive inpatient
treatment.
IT IS TIME FOR MENTAL HEALTH PARITY IN
MEDICARE.
|