1 / 24

What’s going on?

What’s going on?. Psychological  assessment and intervention with people aged 55+ years with possible cognitive changes and/or emotional issues   Geoff Jones Specialist clinical psychologist. Delivering a Healthy WA. Disclaimer. My own views Not those of the WA Health Dept. Case studies.

alma
Download Presentation

What’s going on?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What’s going on? Psychological  assessment and intervention with people aged 55+ years with possible cognitive changes and/or emotional issues   Geoff Jones Specialist clinical psychologist Delivering a Healthy WA

  2. Disclaimer • My own views • Not those of the WA Health Dept

  3. Case studies • Moss St - Health Dept Memory Clinic • GP cued by Geriatrician • GP direct

  4. Take home messages • Suggest early memory loss be assessed • Focus on the person • Think context, emotions and understanding • Do formulation • Intervene on what may be reversible • A local service

  5. Rob’s story

  6. Rob’s story (mid 70s) • Country + contributor • MHP from cued by Geriatrician • Cognitive loss (not dementia) • Depression + anxiety • Not driving, socially isolated • Return to Rob later

  7. How many like Rob? • 1 in 5 aged >70yrs with CIND • 1 in 3 CIND has prodromal AD • 1 in 4 CIND medical conditions • 1 in 4 CIND stroke/vascular • 1 in 20 CIND depression • NB exclusive categories

  8. Assessment framework • Reversible medical causes screened • To answer questions for the person • History & everyday memory now – self & informant • Life-time level of functioning • Possible everyday contributors eg hearing, pain • Emotions and understandings • Over the table testing • Formulation and feedback

  9. Assessment of cognition • Screens with cut-offs – MMSE, MoCA, CAMCOG – Why is the MoCA good? • Neuropsychological assessment Why do more detailed assessment?

  10. Neuropsychological assessment • Why do more detailed assessment? • Increases accuracy of formulation • Opportunity for person to observe • Identify strengths and weaknesses for everyday life – for strategies • Baseline for future • Answer questions for the person

  11. Formulation with Rob • Feeling tired/unworthy/discontent with life situation/ruminations • Short term memory loss + exec • Not using hearing aid • Out of touch with previous activities • Not driving • Wife thinks too much time in the shed – tries to influence his behaviour

  12. Possible solutions with Rob • Hearing aid • Awareness of context on mood • Expand activities consistent with values – behavioural activation • Doing things for others/being a contributor • Return to driving as assessment suggests OK • Strategies to compensate for cognition • No dead man’s goals

  13. Up on the roof - handyman

  14. Missing appointments - teacher

  15. Depressed for 5+years - metal

  16. ?Dementia – country business loss

  17. ?Anxiety & Prodromal AD

  18. Rob – March 2010 • Driving • Volunteer work • Wider range of social activities • Happier – but still ‘tired/aches’ • Ruminations reduced • Memory loss reduced

  19. Rob – 12 months on • Driving – but gets lost • Volunteer work – bit less • Reducing social activities • Still ‘tired/aches’ • Says memory loss worse • No ruminations • Wife now well – talks for Rob

  20. Take home messages • Suggest early memory loss be assessed (assessment is more than screening) • Focus on the person (not the brain) • Think context, emotions and understanding • Do formulation (not just diagnosis) • Intervene on what may be reversible • Local/joined up (primary care/support services)

  21. Challenge If someone is newly diagnosed with a dementia, ask why it was not picked up earlier ............

  22. Thanks to: • Colleagues at Moss St • Assoc Prof Hilary Fine at East Freo Medical Centre • Dr John Kitchin and Mandurah GPs

  23. Future venture • Partnership with PHCS at Jandakot • More support worker cued GP referrals • From April 2011

  24. Contact Geoff Jones Specialist clinical psychologist Phone 0400 214458 Fax 08 9200 5626 Email geoffjonespsych@iinet.net.au

More Related