Title: PSYCHOLOGY and PSYCHIATRY: COMPLEMENTARY AND ADDITIVE
1PSYCHOLOGY and PSYCHIATRY COMPLEMENTARY AND
ADDITIVE
CONFERENCE OF THE AUSTRALIAN PSYCHOLOGICAL
SOCIETY Psychology Ageing Interest Group
Deakin Management Centre, Geelong November 1-3,
2007
- by
- John Snowdon
- Old age psychiatrist, Sydney
2COMPLEMENTARY and ADDITIVE
- Self-esteem. What do we think of each other?
- How well do clinical psychologists and
psychiatrists work together? - Management of BPSD.
- Researching and intervening in cases of severe
domestic squalor. - Training of psychiatrists and clinical
psychologists together?
3PRADO C.G. (1998)
- The last Choice Preemptive Suicide in Advanced
Age. - Greenwood Greenwich CT.
4The primary reasons why (we deduced) 210 people
killed themselves
37
37
40
40
13
13
21
9
6
3
31
19
11
17
28
9
5ISSUES TO DISCUSS
- Understandable? Rational? To whom?
- Do some personality characteristics make it
difficult to tolerate disability, loss, insults,
pain, diminished self-regard ? - Are some suicides altruistic (re burden) ?
- Euthanasia -- understandable? Rational?
6THE SELF-ESTEEM OF OLDER PEOPLE
- What have they retained?
- What do they feel good about?
- Integrity versus Despair.
- Do regrets affect self-esteem?
- Adapting.
7ABRAMOWITZ PLACENTINI (2006)
- Psychologists and psychiatrists hold different
conceptual, treatment and research approaches. - Psychologists are trained to conceptualise and
treat mental health disorders at the level of
individual thinking and behavioural patterns,
exploring the impact of environmental factors on
those patterns. - Training of psychologists is typically achieved
through extensive didactic training with a strong
emphasis on the theoretical underpinnings,
research methods empirical findings.
(Clinical Psychology Science Practice, 13,
292-6)
8ABRAMOWITZ PLACENTINI (2006)(North Carolina)
- In contrast, the zeitgeist in psychiatric
training programs is a neurobiological approach - Psychiatric residency fellowship training is
significantly more applied experiential in
nature and provides notably less emphasis on the
non-biological aspects of normal development and
mental illness. - Differences have the potential to lead to
clashes within mixed departments but can also
lead to synergistic advances.
9ABRAMOWITZ PLACENTINI (2006)
- Referred to a child anxiety training clinic,
where psychology interns child psychiatry
fellows work together under supervision of both
psychiatry and psychology faculty. - The interdisciplinary training model familiarises
each group of trainees with the assessment
treatment approaches typically espoused by the
other discipline and fosters appreciation for the
unique strengths characterizing each groups
background, training and competencies.
10ABRAMOWITZ PLACENTINI (2006)
- Additional tensions
- Psychiatrists given higher status within medical
settings. - Psychiatrists can conduct physical examinations,
prescribe medication and admit patients to
hospital. - Psychiatrists typically command higher salaries.
- Psychiatrists often have control of leadership
positions.
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13BPSD(CHALLENGING BEHAVIOUR)
- Behaviour that is considered dangerous, harmful,
distressing or disturbing to the person or
others. - Includes physical aggression, screaming,
restlessness, agitation, sexual disinhibition,
cursing shadowing though context the
response of others determine how challenging they
are.
14OPIE, DOYLE OCONNOR
- Challenging behaviours in nursing home residents
with dementia a randomised controlled trial of
multidisciplinary interventions. - INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY,
- 2002, 17, 6-13.
A team (psychiatrist, psychologist nurses)
assessed recommended management for 99 BPSD
residents. Early compared to late intervention.
Consultancies were viewed as effective.
15BEHAVIOURAL PROBLEMS IN NURSING HOMES
- In the same way as in cases of depression, staff
in nursing homes need to recognise and describe
behavioural problems, looking at what seemed to
cause them. What were the triggers? Why now,
and whats it mean? What seems to settle the
problem? - The team (not just the individual) can then work
on a solution, which might be environmental but
could be treatment of constipation or UTI or
depression, or maybe medication to settle
distress, or control delusional beliefs.. Etc.
16SURVEY
- Most nursing homes have few or no staff who have
had training in mental disorder assessment /or
management - UK reports 10 to 20 of nurses in more
specialised facilities have had such training
17RATING SCALES
- NPI
- Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory
- Behave-AD
-
- etc.
18 OF NORWEGIAN RESIDENTS SHOWING CMAI BEHAVIOUR
gtONCE PER WEEK(Testad, Aasland Aarsland, IJGP
2007, 22, 916-921)
- Repetitious sentences/questions 31
- Cursing/verbal aggression 25
- Complaining
25 - Constant requests for attention 24
- Pacing
23 - Screaming
15 - Making strange noises 13
- Grabbing
13 - Hitting
9.6 - Scratching
5 - Physical sexual advances 2.4
- Negativism
22 -
- 17 other behaviours
1.8 to 14.4 -
19NUMBER () OUT OF 2445 RESIDENTS WHO MANIFESTED
PROBLEM BEHAVIOURS FOR MUCH OF THE TIME
Snowdon et al, 1996
20- An enthusiastic, committed, positive thinking
clinical psychologist can contribute so much to a
catchment area (integrated community and
hospital) old age psychiatry service.
21MODELS OF PROVISION OF PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES
- Visiting psychiatrist. Responds to referral of a
specific patient. No subsequent care unless
called back. - Consultation-liaison. Sees patient and staff.
Education. May have designated nurse in n.h. to
coordinate referrals. - Multidisciplinary team approach. Team of n.h.
and/or visiting staff, e.g. nurses, social
worker, psychologist. Old age psychiatry teams
can do it if adequately resourced. - Nurse-centred approach. Back-up by psychiatrist.
- Telepsychiatry.
22WHEN TO REFER, AND TO WHOM
- Recognise theres a problem.
- Intervention.
- G.P. staff try alternatives.
- Referral. Who to? Depends on whos available,
and whats the main problem. - IF BEHAVIOURAL
- ? psychologist, nurse-specialist,
- Behavioural Support Unit
- or old age psychiatry team
- IF DEPRESSED, PARANOID, SEVERELY AGITATED
- psychiatrist ( supporting team)
- Ideally, the team already liaises educates!
23A model for interventions in cases of BPSD
- If a residents behaviour doesnt settle with
usual treatment provided by n.h. GP - Refer to specialist for consultation, assessment,
short-term intervention. - May need more intensive treatment in situ.
Special care top-up funds to broker additional
services. Behavioural Assessment and
Intervention Service BAsIS teams - Transfer to special assessment/care/treatment
unit. Weeks to months. - Few need the Neuro-behavioural unit. Physically
violent, may be younger big. Maybe 20 beds per
600,000 elderly in NSW.
24Bird et al (2002, report to Australian
Government)
- Individualised, primarily psychosocial approaches
in nursing homes. - They argued that the impact of the behaviour
(rather than the behaviour itself) determines
whether it is a problem. - It is possible to treat such cases in situ,
- without hospitalisation.
25Squalor data-base (Central Sydney)
- All those referred to the Central Sydney (Eastern
Sector) old age psychiatry team because they were
deemed to be living in squalor were rated on the - LIVING CONDITIONS RATING SCALE
- (Samios K, 1996. RANZCP. Unpublished)
- This scale was used by Halliday et al (2000)
- in a community study of people who live in
squalor. - (Lancet, 355, 882-886)
2613-item Living Conditions Rating Scale (interior)
Reliability rated by Halliday Snowdon while
developing a new scale (to be published)
27Central Sydney (Eastern sector) old age
psychiatry data-base of people assessed as living
in unclean accommodation, referred Jan 1, 2000
to Sept.30, 2007
Raters of LCRS (of 14) stated whether they
regarded the squalor as moderate or severe
28SEVERE DOMESTIC SQUALOR
- Cooney and Hamid (1995) referred to
- a reclusive elderly person living alone in a
dilapidated filthy house. The home is cluttered
with rubbish and infested with vermin. Excrement
and decomposing food are strewn around the floors
and the stench emanating is unbearable to all but
the occupant, who is blissfully unconcerned by
the situation.
29SEVERE DOMESTIC SQUALOR
- Descriptions of cases can largely be grouped
into - those where accumulation of useless items and
articles had obstructed proper care of a persons
living conditions, and - those where filth and refuse had accumulated
because of failure to get rid of them.
30SEVERE DOMESTIC SQUALOR
- Environmental uncleanliness (and often associated
personal uncleanliness) - and, to a varying extent,
- Lack of concern about their living conditions
- Social withdrawal
- Hostile attitudes
- Stubborn refusal of help
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41INTERVENTIONSJohn Snowdon, Ajit Shah and Graeme
Halliday(International Psychogeriatrics 2007,
19, 37-51)
- Reports suggest that agencies worldwide are
generally uncoordinated and consequently
inefficient when trying to intervene and help in
cases of squalor. Insufficient attention,
resources and research have been committed to
improving our understanding and interventions.
42FROST GROSS (1993)
- The hoarding of possessions.
- Behaviour Research and Therapy, 31, 367-381.
- Most theories which mention hoarding do so in
the context of obsessive compulsive disorders.
Hoarding is clearly related to obsessional
thinking and to compulsive behaviors.
CHIU, CHONG LAU (2003)
Exploratory study of hoarding behaviour in Hong
Kong. Hong Kong Journal of Psychiatry, 13,
23-30. Over half the subjects had gt90 of the
dwelling covered by hoarded items, but only one
subject was diagnosed as having OCD.
43Not all those who self-neglectand not all those
who hoardlive in severe domestic squalor
- Some people neglect (seem not to care about)
cleanliness of themselves, their dependants or
their homes and dont get rid of rubbish (e.g.
some with dementia, schizophrenia, alcoholism).
Some are physically or cognitively unable to take
action. - Excessive or inappropriate collecting (and
especially failure to discard) may lead to
difficulty in cleaning.
44IT IS LIKELY THAT THOSE WHO LIVE IN SEVERE
DOMESTIC SQUALOR START DOING SO BECAUSE OF A
COMPLEX INTERPLAY OF TRIGGERS AND
VULNERABILITIES1. Obsessive compulsions and
indecisiveness may be largely to blame in some
cases. 2. In others, accumulation of refuse
and useless items is attributable to apathy and
impaired executive function, resulting from brain
disease or mental disorder. Lack of impulse
control could be contributory. There is limited
but growing evidence that frontal lobe
dysfunction is a major factor.
45Aspects of collectionism, self-neglect and
severe domestic squalor
- Organised and systematic collecting
- Compulsive acquisition with little attempt to
resist (items may be of value, collected
systematically but to excess) - Hoarding acquisition of, and failure to discard
possessions of limited use or value - Accumulation of rubbish
- Neglect personal care and home cleanliness
- Neglect basic health needs (including
medication) - Neglect social needs
- Fail to eat/drink enough
- Poor care of finances
- Fail to protect self from financial or sexual
abuse
46LCRS ratings of hoarding clutter
47Prevalence/incidence
- The population of persons aged 65 living outside
aged care facilities in Central Sydney (Eastern
sector) is about 18,000. A referral rate of 140
subjects aged 65 in 7.75 years an incidence of
1 per 1000. - The incidence of cases of people 65 living in
moderate/severe squalor 0.7 per 1000 - These are cases referred to an old age psychiatry
service the number of non-referred cases can
only be guessed. Some were referred but refused
to see us. - Because over half of those referred are found to
be still at home after one year, the prevalence
of people aged 65 living in domestic squalor is
estimated at over 2 per 1000, and of those living
in moderate or severe domestic squalor at about
1.5 per 1000.
48Contents of September 07 BJ Clin Psychol
- CBT counselling for chronic fatigue.
- Subtypes of borderline personality disorder a
latent class analysis. - The Depression Anxiety Stress Scales in depressed
clinical samples. - The structure of PTSD symptoms.
- Beliefs about depression coping strategies.
- Trauma stimuli in people with schizophrenia.
- Emotion and tension in females with borderline
personality disorder. - Wisconsin Card Sorting Test in schizophrenia.
49Contents of BJ Med Psychol, December 2001
- CBT of delusional disorder.
- OCD phenomenology, help-seeking, treatment.
- Shame-based guilt-based PTSD.
- Effect of dissociation at encoding on intrusive
memories. - Mediation of depression by perceptions of defeat
entrapment. - Affective states associated with bingeing
purging. - Attachment in anorexia nervosa.
50CONCLUSIONS
- Good reason for clinical psychologists and old
age psychiatrists to respect and work well with
each other. - Clinical psychologists have much to offer, if
only we could attract them into our services. - What about training psychiatrists and
psychologists together for at least part of their
training.