Schizophrenia and Psychoses in Later Life
By 2050, the number of people aged sixty years and older with schizophrenia is expected to double and affect about 10 million people worldwide. Psychoses are among the most common experiences in later life, with a lifetime risk of 23 percent. As a result, there is a looming crisis in mental health care. Schizophrenia and Psychoses in Later Life is the first major multidisciplinary reference on these important disorders. The book provides guidelines for clinical care, research and policy that are consistent with the emerging paradigmatic changes occurring with respect to schizophrenia in later life. This book features multidisciplinary contributions from experts in the fields of biological psychiatry, social psychiatry, sociology, anthropology, social work, psychology, and neuropsychology that will help professionals to integrate services and attain the best outcomes. The text will guide psychiatrists, psychologists, gerontologists, policymakers, and social scientists in creating innovative new programs to help this underserved and growing population.
- Presents the first book in over a decade on the subject, and there has since been a dramatic change in our understanding of the course and outcome of schizophrenia in later life
- Provides readers with up-to-date information, with a broad perspective on the topics that is of use to researchers and clinicians
- Focuses on new, recovery-orientated forms of care
Reviews & endorsements
'This book is a unique compendium of the major studies of aging and schizophrenia. In this way, it provides an essential resource for current understanding of the issues involved. The effort itself involves an important and often neglected area of the mental health field. The book covers the two crucial general areas, the nature of the problem of schizophrenia in later life, and the variety of programs possible for its treatment. … This broad-reaching review reminds care-givers, clinicians, researchers, and community activists of the diversity of ‘treatments’ that need to be considered and evaluated for more intelligent approaches to care.' John Strauss, Yale University, Connecticut
Product details
March 2019Adobe eBook Reader
9781108337311
0 pages
4 b/w illus. 11 tables
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Part I. Epidemiology, Historical background, Illness Phenomenology, and Diagnostic Issues:
- 1. Epidemiology of psychotic disorders: methodological issues and empirical findings Robert Sigström and Deborah Gustafson
- 2. Epidemiology of schizophrenia: patterns of care for older adults with schizophrenia Donna McAlpine and Ellen McCreedy
- 3. Assessment and diagnosis of psychotic symptoms in older adults Michael Reinhardt, Dina Ghoneim, Tessa Murante, Eric Nelson, Paulina Vargas and Shifra Mincer
- 4. A comparison of early and late-onset schizophrenia Dina Ghoneim
- Part II. Biological, Neurocognitive, and Medical Aspects:
- 5. Biological changes in older persons with schizophrenia Michael Centorino and Susan Schultz
- 6. Cognitive functioning in older adults with schizophrenia Tarek Rajji
- 7. Medical issues in older persons with schizophrenia Frank Copeli and Carl I. Cohen
- Part III. Outcome and Course:
- 8. Assessing outcomes in schizophrenia in later life Carl I. Cohen
- 9. Positive psychiatry for schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders Graham Eglit, Barton W. Palmer and Dilip V. Jeste
- Part IV. Social Functioning and Mood:
- 10. Social functioning among older community-dwelling persons with schizophrenia Paul D. Meesters
- 11. Depression and suicidality in older adults with schizophrenia John Kasckow and Aninditha Vengassery
- 12. Community treatment needs Paul D. Meesters
- 13. Treatment of schizophrenia and psychoses in older adults: psychopharmacological approaches Subramoniam Madhusoodanan
- 14. Model programs and interventions for older adults with schizophrenia Stephen J. Bartels, Peter R. DiMilia and Heather Leutwyler
- 15. Changing caregiver needs with increasing age of people with schizophrenia Harriet P. Lefley and Brian R. Ghezelaiagh
- 16. Personal accounts of living with schizophrenia across a lifetime: coping strategies and subjective perspectives Tova Band-Winterstein, Hila Avieli and Peli Mushkin
- 17. The care of older adults with schizophrenia in developing countries Rujvi Kamat and Samir T. Mukherjee
- Part V. Health Policy and Research: Future Directions:
- 18. Schizophrenia in later life: public policy issues in the United States Michael B. Friedman, Lisa Furst, Paul S. Nestadt, Kimberly A. Williams and Lina Rodriguez
- 19. Epilogue: controversies, conjectures, and future directions Carl I. Cohen and Paul D. Meesters.