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Published byDominick Taylor Modified over 9 years ago
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Modifying treatment for mildly impaired older adults. Felton Institute December 6, 2007 Patricia A. Arean, PhD The Over 60 Program Department of Psychiatry, UCSF
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Learning Objectives Understand the influences of cognitive impairment on practice Recognize behaviorally when cognitive issues may be important Tailor your work with these patients using some easy strategies (using psychotherapy as an example).
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Mild Cognitive Impairment (revisited) Cognitive Impairment: –Not just memory –Executive dysfunction –Language impairment –Attention –Information processing speed 30% to 70% co-occurrence with mental illness Often under recognized Can influence treatment outcomes
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Mr. K 79 year old middle eastern man; MMSE = 29 Well groomed, very well dressed, no belt Complains of losing common items around house and at work Very tearful, sudden onset, cannot tie to any trigger Missed entire column on BDI Narrative often goes off track, forgets questions asked of him, but remembers on cuing.
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Mrs. Q 84 year old woman; MMSE = 30; Depressed after daughter moved from town; Increased clutter in home; Slightly disheveled in appearance; Stopped many activities.
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Psychotherapy
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How psychotherapy works… Psycho-education; Reframing past and current experiences from negativistic to balanced/rational perspectives; Mood induction; Resolve problems causing depression.
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Cognitive skills needed to make psychotherapy work… Recall and recognition; Attention and working memory; Speed of information processing; Problem solving skill; Mental/cognitive flexibility; Expressive and receptive language.
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Recall and recognition Depends on causes of memory impairments; Cued recall approaches –Sequenced retrieval; –Paired learning; –Environmental prompts Life review techniques
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Attention and working memory Shorter sessions; Timing of sessions (am versus pm); “Cue and review”; Socratic questioning.
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Speed of information processing One problem at a time; Cue and review; More sessions over time.
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Problem solving skill Targeted interventions Action planning Brain storming techniques Prompting
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Expressive and receptive language. Behavioral activation; Simple, common terms; Tie complex terms to familiar terms; Symbols don’t always work.
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