학술논문

Identifying elders with neuropsychiatric problems in a clinical setting.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Neurosciences in Rural Practice. 2013 Supplement 1, pS24-S30. 7p. 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*NEUROBEHAVIORAL disorders
*MENTAL health of older people
*COMORBIDITY
*OUTPATIENT medical care
*MEDICAL personnel
*HYPERTENSION
*VISION disorders
Language
ISSN
0976-3147
Abstract
Objective: Multiple health problems among the elderly necessitate a comprehensive enquiry to detect problems early and also initiate treatment. We utilized available validated instruments to comprehensively identify older persons with neuro-psychiatric problems including dementia and comorbid medical ailments in the screening desk of the geriatric clinic. Materials and Methods: Individuals aged 60 years and above seeking outpatient care at NIMHANS during a 2-year period (October 2008-September 2010) participated. We used General Health Questionnaire (12-item), AD8, questions to identify psychoses and neurological problems and a checklist of common medical ailments. A probable clinical diagnosis was made at the end by medical personnel based on ICD-10. Results: A total of 5,260 individuals were screened and more than one-third (36.7%) were women. About 50% had psychological distress (⩾2 on GHQ-12), 20.1% had probable cognitive impairment (⩾2 on AD8) and about 17% had symptoms suggestive of psychoses (⩾1 on Psychoses screener). More than 65% had either a neurological or neurosurgical problems (⩾1 on Neurological screener) and headache was the commonest complaint. At probable diagnosis, more than 50% had a neurological problem and over 30% had psychiatric disorders. Of these the most common psychiatric illnesses were psychotic disorders (22.0%), mood disorders (21.4%) and dementia (14.4%). The most common medical comorbidity included hypertension (36.4%), visual impairment (31.8%) and joint pains (30.5%). Nearly 80% had one or more medical comorbidity in addition to psychiatric illness. The overall set of instruments took about 15-20 minutes. It systematically and comprehensively guided in evaluating the elderly for neuropsychiatric problems and hence was collated to constitute the Instruments for Comprehensive Evaluation of the Elderly (ICE-E). Conclusions: ICE-E was brief, easy to administer and improved decision making even by personnel from a non-medical background. The instrument aided in systematically detecting neuro-psychiatric problems among the elderly (including psychological distress and cognitive changes) and other medical comorbidities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]