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David Jolley is Professor of Old Age Psychiatry at Penn Hospital (Wolverhampton WV45 HN, UK). Nick Kosky is a consultant general psychiatrist with Westhaven Community Mental Health Team in Weymouth and Frank Holloway is a consultant psychiatrist with Westways Rehabilitation Unit in Croydon.
| Abstract |
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| Mental health and mental illness in late life |
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Two conditions associated with ageing stroke and dementia are dealt with only within the NSF for Older People. This has the potential to produce difficulties for younger people with these conditions. Certainly, the exclusion of older people from consideration within the NSF for Mental Health (Department of Health 1999), which focuses exclusively on people of working age, has disadvantaged some patients and made differentials of service quality based on age (ageism) difficult to avoid. This is most apparent for people who survive to become old despite their experience of mental disorder from an earlier age, the so-called graduates of the mental health system.
| Services for people with mental illnesses |
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General psychiatry has given rise to a number of subspecialties addressing, for instance, the psychiatry of substance misuse, eating disorders and the puerperium. It has also developed the practice of community psychiatry and specialised rehabilitation services for patients with enduring symptoms or disability (Department of Health, 1999).
| Long-stay patients in mental hospitals (the original graduates) |
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In addition, the dementias, including Alzheimers disease, vascular dementia and Huntingtons chorea, have remained without effective pharmaceutical or other treatment until very recently. Thus, older people were differentially retained within mental hospitals as old long-stay patients and continued to accumulate within cohorts of new long-stay patients from the 1970s onwards (Department of Health and Social Security, 1985).
Pioneering old age psychiatry services usually originated in a mental hospital (Arie & Jolley, 1982). Several wards, each housing 40 or more older patients, usually of one gender but of mixed history and diagnosis, would be offered to the new service as a working capital of beds often running into the hundreds. Discharge or death produced beds available for further admissions or allowed resources to be released so that bed numbers could be reduced and/or the staff-to-patient ratio improved.
Older people living in other wards remained the responsibility of the undifferentiated general psychiatry service or might be included in a rehabilitation service. In many instances these patients were managed quite passively. They were not mentioned in guidance and planning documents of the period. It was assumed that they were content to live out their lives in the milieu which had been their home for many years, and that they would not be replaced.
Greater interest was taken in their characteristics and needs when it became clear that their natural decline was not progressing as quickly as was convenient for managers and politicians determined to close mental hospitals to a targeted timescale. There were problems of logistics and economics in running down several hospitals within each region. Every hospital included many wards and hundreds of patients. Losing a few patients at a time meant fewer patients per ward, increasing staff-to-patient ratios and sustained or even increased overhead costs. It was felt that money and skills could be used to better effect in alternative community treatment programmes and that a speedier managed closure of the mental hospitals was essential. This was achieved by discharging long-stay patients, including the elderly, to alternative accommodation.
| Numbers |
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Numbers of beds in mental hospitals continued to fall: by 35% between 1975 and 1982 and by roughly 50% every 6 years from then on (Department of Health and Social Security, 1985). Yet psychiatric case registers reported persistently high numbers of older people with chronic psychoses into the mid-1980s. There was a considerable variation in prevalence between different health communities: 11 per 100 000 in Oxford, 60 per 100 000 in Salford. The average for England was estimated to be 31 per 100 000. Thus, graduate elderly people with chronic psychosis contributed between a quarter and a half of mental illness bed usage by older people (Gibbons et al, 1984).
| Characteristics |
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Among the patients with chronic schizophrenia, active delusional beliefs continued to be evident in 36% (compared with 63% on admission), hallucinations in 40% (similar to the rate on admission) and negative symptoms were demonstrated by more than 70% (compared with 60% on admission). Thought disorder and negative symptoms were less evident in late-onset schizophrenia, but persisted in patients who had endured their illness since early life (Howard et al, 1993). Several studies have demonstrated cognitive deterioration together with ventricular enlargement and cortical atrophy in graduates with chronic schizophrenia (Dale & Burns, 1997).
The social lives of these graduates were characterised by long contact with mental health services, broken roots and little involvement with their biological families, and fragmentation or absence of career or work history. Many had never married, marriages that had occurred had failed, and most could identify nowhere but hospital to call home.
Many demonstrated poor impulse control and were judged still to pose potential risk to themselves by self-harm or to others because of violence. In addition, most were lacking in initiative and motivation and would neglect the basics of self-care and hygiene without supervision and prompting. They lacked insight into their limitations and the impact their behaviour might have on ordinary people.
Their physical health was often poor for, although tuberculosis was no longer the scourge of mental hospitals that it had been, other illnesses remained more prevalent than in the general population. Surveys revealed particular deficiencies of oral and foot health, and studies using the Salford case register confirmed that excess death rates are associated not only with suicide and other forms of violence, but with diagnoses from most ICD chapters, most markedly circulatory disorders (Baxter, 1996).
Thus, graduates are socially vulnerable and have ongoing need for treatment of barely contained psychiatric disorders and physical health problems associated with age, self-neglect and a life of stress and underprivilege.
| Outcomes of deinstitutionalisation |
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Closure of these hospitals destroyed what had appeared to be the natural environment for graduates. In many instances, discharge from one form of institution (a hospital sponsored by the NHS budget) was simply to another, smaller, less specialised institution: a hostel, residential home or nursing home funded through social security benefits, social services or other, sometimes mixed, means (Hafner & An Der Heiden, 1986). These smaller units usually provided better physical facilities than the old asylum: single or shared bedrooms instead of huge dormitories, smaller, better-furnished sitting rooms, easier access to everyday shopping and leisure facilities available to the general public, and exposure to and involvement with the general public. Of the 50 elderly graduates discharged from hospital in York, 40 were found to be content with their new lives, although still very disabled (Jones et al, 1986).
Several publications from a project by the Team for the Assessment of Psychiatric Services (TAPS), set up by the North East Thames Regional Health Authority, have catalogued the outcomes for elderly long-stay patients discharged from Friern Barnet hospital.Treiman et al(1996) found that only 71 out of 130 were alive 3 years later. Half of these had returned to hospital, but the survivors in the community were well settled and functioning better than those who had stayed in hospital. Mortality rates for those discharged were no higher than for those remaining in hospital, although one person died by suicide and one had been imprisoned. Survivors in the community could name more friends, had more social contacts and were happier with their treatment and accommodation than their peers who had been left in hospital (Anderson et al, 1993; Dayson, 1993). At least 6 of the 278 in Daysons cohort became vagrants within a year of discharge and there remains concern that mental illness results in homelessness and neglect of older people as well as younger people, although only 14% of elderly homeless were deemed mentally ill by Crane (1990) compared with 26% of younger homeless people.
| New-generation graduates |
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| Box 1 The curse of general psychiatry These are the words of a consultant psychiatrist: Its an interesting time to be a general psychiatrist interesting perhaps on the lines of that ancient curse: "May you live in interesting times". Public expectation, a real rise in the prevalence of some non-psychotic disorders, changing referral patterns and technological advances mean that we are busier than ever before. Politically driven initiatives which lack clinical merit and a thriving blame culture have led to cynicism, exhaustion and defensive clinical practice in all of us at some time, and some of us almost all the time. When burdened, the natural desire is to shed some of the load. There can be a sense of relief when a patient crosses the threshold criterion for transfer to another service. We must, however, try to see matters through the eyes of the patient and their carers and keep them at the centre of all we do. Sixty-five is a good time to step back, reconsider and decide what will best meet their needs for the future.
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The elderly graduates of the past were defined by their long stay in particular accommodation (a mental hospital) and by their clinical and social characteristics. Subsequent generations have similar clinical characteristics: unresolved positive and negative symptoms of psychosis, relapsing or enduring disorders of mood, disabling cognitive loss and coarsened, disinhibited personalities. They are prone to physical ill health and may be stigmatised by the side-effects of long-term treatment with antipsychotic medication. Socially, too, they may be just as disabled and destitute of personal contacts and supports, as were previous generations of graduates (Abdul-Hamid et al, 1999; Holloway et al, 1999). There are striking similarities in the socioclinical profiles of graduates drawn by Campbell & Ananth (2002) and of mentally ill homeless people described by Timms & Balazs (1997).
An added hazard for the new generation of graduates is the lack of a champion. As long as they remain peaceful, causing no trouble to others, even if they themselves are suffering, no one takes notice.
If they become physically ill, their mental disorder may make recognition of their illness and its treatment problematic.
If their mental state decompensates in response to physical illness, change in social circumstances, change of medication or simply spontaneous change with time or in association with age-related cerebral disease, crises may occur that the services are ill-equipped to handle.
What is required is a system of care, treatment and support that promotes and maintains best function and adjustment, rather than responds reluctantly to crises.
| Responsive and responsible services |
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Guidelines need to be flexible, as different places are at differing stages of development in the specialisation and organisation of mental health services. What suits and works well in one locality may be entirely alien or impracticable in another. Some areas accommodate many patients: some originating within the locality, others placed there from elsewhere many years ago. Other areas have few at present, but may see greater numbers in the future as a consequence of new policies.
Services where old age psychiatry is strong will have agreed that most older patients will transfer to their care on or soon after their 65th birthday. Where old age psychiatry is weak and general psychiatry or rehabilitation psychiatry remains strong, one of the latter will naturally continue to support their older long-term patients unless or until additional frailty or dementia produce radically different needs.
On occasion, the availability of facilities is less important than the interests of influential key professionals, who may be determined to include, or exclude, particular individuals or a category of patients from their orbit of responsibility. Matters are not easy where there is general lack of resources. No guidance paper from the 1960s onwards has specified investment or development for graduate long-term patients. They have been wished away in the minds of planners, convinced of the efficacy and power of new treatments and new systems of care. It is likely, however, that the absolute number of people taking these characteristics into late life has risen over the past 50 years, as those with mental illness share in the populations improved life expectancy.
Elderly graduates are not a high priority for general psychiatry services that feel beset on every front with demands to take responsibility for more and more risky styles of service, wider definition of patients to be treated, less and less control, less and less recruitment, and more and more litigation. Acute in-patient wards may be particularly unsuitable for the care of frail older people.
It is necessary to face facts and to provide modern services that are sensitive, responsive to the real needs of current populations and properly resourced to establish systems that will ensure the future remodelling of services in anticipation of predictable needs.
There are two main groups of patients to consider. First, there are the patients who have fallen out of touch with specialist mental health services, but have a history of chronic or relapsing illness and have had extensive involvement with specialist services in the past. They might be quite well and have no need for further help, or they might be suffering from treatable symptoms or have resolvable social or physical health problems passively ignored if they are not posing obvious problems in the quietude of a hostel or residential home. They might continue to receive antipsychotic medication without specialist medical review and be experiencing side-effects that could be avoided by modern medication. Old age services may have protocols agreeing to take responsibility for such patients if they re-present to secondary mental health services after an arbitrary interval (typically, 2 years).
Second, there are the patients who are under the care of specialist mental health services, where there is conflict or uncertainty about their best care. These people too might be at risk of passive management that accepts symptoms, side-effects and physical or social disadvantage as inevitable and to be tolerated as long as the patients do not cause trouble. The discontinuity associated with passage from care within the mental health services of health and/or social services has been compounded since the sponsorship of better and more expensive care packages for patients in the community promoted by the NSF for Mental Health. Brutal transfer from one service to another can terminate relationships with much loved carers who provided a generously sponsored programme of support and rehabilitation and replace them with unknown, changing faces working within a threadbare system shared with large numbers of much older, physically frailer patients. The system providing health and social care for older people may not give weight to the needs of graduates, for they are so different in kind from those of its mainstream clients, who are likely to be further advantaged, in the competition for resources, by having family members prepared to act as advocates.
In a Council Report encouraging good practice in the care of graduates (the product of 3 years collaborative discussions by the Faculties of Old Age Psychiatry, General Psychiatry and the Section of Rehabilitation and Social Psychiatry), the Royal College of Psychiatrists asked agencies responsible for commissioning and providing mental health services to take action to identify both groups of graduates within their populations (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2002). The Report recommended that every individual be fully reviewed so that their physical, mental and social needs could be understood and optimally met. Thereafter, it recommended that their needs remain under review within a care programme approach framework.
Authorities will need to address the issue of transfer of responsibilities for patients between specialties as they enter old age. This must be done taking into account particulars of local resources and dynamics and the wishes expressed by both carers and patients. Figure 1
offers one example of a transition protocol that can be used to ensure that each individuals needs are considered systematically by all relevant parties. It confirms that this is an iterative process rather than a once-for-all-time decision conference. No change of supervision or care and treatment should be to the disadvantage of the patient.
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| Multiple choice questions |
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| References |
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