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Published online before print May 15, 2007, 10.1097/JGP.0b013e3180381537
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 15:708-715, August 2007
© 2007 American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry
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Article

Depressed Mood, Cognitive Impairment, and Survival in Older People Admitted to Care Homes in England

Caroline Sutcliffe, M.Sc., Alistair Burns, M.D., F.R.C.P, F.R.C.Psych., David Challis, Ph.D., Caroline Godlove Mozley, M.Sc., Lis Cordingley, Ph.D., Heather Bagley, R.G.N., M.Phil., and Peter Huxley, Ph.D.

From the Personal Social Services Research Unit, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.

Objective: To investigate psychiatric morbidity, cognitive impairment, dependency, and survival in residents newly admitted to care homes.

Methods: A total of 308 older people were assessed using measures of cognitive impairment and depressive symptomatology, and interviewable residents completed a quality-of-life interview. Dependency levels were assessed by interviews with staff and medication data were collected from home records. Follow-up assessments were carried out at five and nine months. A telephone follow-up approximately 12 months later augmented the survival data.

Results: Of residents whose outcomes were known, 73% survived throughout the nine-month study period. Residents who died before the five-month follow-up had higher scores on the depression measure than those surviving longer. Reduced survival was predicted by greater dependency at baseline. Of 188 surviving residents, 63 (38%) were classified as depressed at baseline. Twenty-seven (43%) of the latter were still classed as depressed at five and nine months. Just 19% of residents rated as depressed at baseline were prescribed antidepressant medication, increasing to 26% at each follow-up. There was significant coexistence of cognitive impairment and depressive symptomatology.

Conclusion: High levels of mortality, psychiatric morbidity, and chronicity of depressed mood among residents requires care homes to improve access to specialist resources such as geriatric consultation, old-age psychiatry, occupational therapy, and physiotherapy. Findings suggest that future care standards should include external factors, such as the extent of access to relevant specialist services for vulnerable older people.

Key Words: Depressive symptomatology • dependency • long-term care • cognitive impairment • survival • older people




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G. Selbaek, O. Kirkevold, and K. Engedal
The Course of Psychiatric and Behavioral Symptoms and the Use of Psychotropic Medication in Patients With Dementia in Norwegian Nursing Homes--A 12-Month Follow-Up Study
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, July 1, 2008; 16(7): 528 - 536.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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