Products of Prejudice

Last week we examined the causes of commonly-held stigmas against geriatric mental illness, including self-stigma, social stigma, and institutional stigma.

How do these stigmas affect the ability of elders to seek care for mental illnesses?

1. Fewer doctors train in geriatric healthcare, which makes it difficult for seniors to find specialized medical doctorattention. Seniors must travel further distances to see doctors with a detailed understanding of mental illness in the elderly.

a. Many doctors believe that they can have a more meaningful impact as pediatric psychiatrists, rather than as geriatric psychiatrists because they can change a child’s future as opposed to alleviating just a few years of suffering in mentally ill seniors.While pediatric psychiatrists provide immeasurable services to mentally ill youths, this mindset devalues the mind of the senior with respect to other age groups.

b. Historically, major healthcare plans have not provided enough incentive for hospital to provide mental health services. This is changing as a result of the Affordable Care Act, which we will discuss more in detail next week.

2. Doctors without training in geriatric care often misdiagnose or directly discriminate and stigmatize patients with mental illnesses. This can have a profoundly negative effect on patients by reducing treatment efficacy. Discrimination from healthcare workers can even worsen treatment outcomes. While many doctors are not directly prejudiced against the elderly, they are just as susceptible to prevailing stereotypes as the next person.

3. Because of social and self-stigmas, patients may distrust the medical establishment’s ability to treat their illness or fear institutionalization in a psychiatric ward. As a result, patients would be less likely to seek treatment for psychiatric disorders.

Education is the best strategy to overcoming stigma

Education and Empowerment of the Mentally Ill
ageismIn order to effect long-lasting change of public sentiment, people afflicted by psychiatric diseases must dispel their own stereotypes against mental illness. These include the incorrect assumptions that:
• Mental illness is incurable
• Mental illness is a normal part of aging
• Elders with mental illnesses are not worth being treated

 

Education and Empowerment of the Public

The public must also be educated about mental health and aging. Today’s mass media often disseminates misleading and derogatory images concerning mental health and the aging process. Seniors are often portrayed as out of touch with reality, childish, and useless. Few films depict old age in a positive light, and many films focus on the dangerous aspects of mental illness, though only a small percentage of mentally ill patients are violent.

bedsideEducation of the next generation of doctors and medical professionals must be a priority for the future. A study conducted at the University of Calgary, Canada, showed that basic psychiatry education in a group of medical students helped to reduce common stigmas and misconceptions about mentally ill patients and improved student confidence when working with patients with psychiatric diseases. Geriatric healthcare must also become an integral part of medical education as America’s senior population (65+) is projected to double by the year 2030. Many of these efforts are currently underway.

Tune in next week to learn about current efforts to eliminate mental illness stigmas.

References

  • CDC.gov. “Depression is Not a Normal Part of Growing Older.” http://www.cdc.gov/aging/mentalhealth/depression.html
  • Mentally Healthy Aging: A Report on Overcoming Stigma for Older Americans. DHHS Pub. No. (SMA) 05-3988. Rockville, MD: Center for Mental Health Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2005.
  • Neelgard, L. “Report: Too little mental health care for seniors.” Associated Press. http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/health/story/2012-07-10/aging-mental-health/56132426/1
  • Papish et al. “Reducing the stigma of mental illness in undergraduate medical education: a randomized controlled trial.” BMC Medical Education 2013, 13:141
  • Persky, T. “Overlooked and Underserved: Elders in Need of Mental Health Care.” http://www.mhaging.org/info/olus.html
  • Thornicroft, G et al. “Discrimination against people with mental illness: what can psychiatrists do?” Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 2010, 16: 53-59

 

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