| Institute on Aging
National Center on Elder Abuse
2000
Reviewed by Loree
Cook-Daniels
“Mental health Issues in Elder Abuse” is one
of a series of well-regarded technical assistance manuals
produced by the Institute on Aging and the National Center
on Elder Abuse (NCEA).
The manual opens with an introduction to mental disorders
and how they affect the elderly and covers clinical depression,
bereavement, suicide, dementia, pseudodementia, age-related
cognitive decline, anxiety disorders, adjustment disorder,
personality disorders, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, substance
abuse and drug interactions, and dual diagnoses.
The section on mental health factors associated with elder
abuse focuses on what’s been missing from some recent
important reports on mental health: how elders who have mental
illnesses are abused, how abuse may cause mental health problems,
and the connection between mental illness and elder abusers.
This part of the manual also discusses how various systems
respond (or don’t respond) to the needs of such elders
and perpetrators.
Part 3 of the manual looks at how the network of services
to abusers and victims with mental illnesses can be strengthened.
This part concludes with recommendations for what communities
can do to improve mental health service delivery.
As with all the technical assistance manuals in this collection,
the document closes with references and short reviews of promising
practices, professional training, and national projects or
organizations sponsoring innovative, relevant projects.
The manual is not available online. Hard copies are available
for $15 each (plus 8.5% tax for California residents) from:
Institute on Aging’s San Francisco Consortium for Elder
Abuse Prevention
3330 Geary Boulevard
San Francisco, CA 94118
(415) 447-1989, ext. 513 (voice)
(415) 447-1250 (fax)
mtwomey@ioaging.org
(e-mail)
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