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E-grāmata: Oxford Handbook of Clinical Geropsychology [Oxford Handbooks Online E-books]

Edited by (School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane QLD, Australia), Edited by (Professor of Clinical Psychology, Programme Director ClinPsyD and Head of Department of Clinical Psychology, Norwich Medical School, University of East Angli)
  • Formāts: 1152 pages
  • Sērija : Oxford Library of Psychology
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Sep-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780191750892
  • Oxford Handbooks Online E-books
  • Cena pašlaik nav zināma
  • Formāts: 1152 pages
  • Sērija : Oxford Library of Psychology
  • Izdošanas datums: 18-Sep-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780191750892
Throughout the world, the population of older adults continues to grow. The rise in geriatric populations has seen an increase in research on clinical diagnostic, assessment, and treatment issues aimed at this population. Clinical geropsychologists have increased their interest both in providing mental health services as well as developing approaches to improve quality of life for all older adults.

The Oxford Handbook of Clinical Geropsychology is a landmark publication in this field, providing broad and authoritative coverage of the research and practice issues in clinical geropsychology today, as well as innovations expanding the field's horizons. Comprising chapters from the foremost scholars in clinical geropsychology from around the world, the handbook captures the global proliferation of activity in this field.

In addition to core sections on topics such as sources of psychological distress, assessment, diagnosis, and intervention, the handbook includes valuable chapters devoted to methodological issues such as longitudinal studies and meta-analyses in the field, as well as new and emerging issues such as technological innovations and social media use in older populations. Each chapter offers a review of the most pertinent international literature, outlining current issues as well as important cultural implications and key practice issues where relevant, and identifying possibilities for future research and policy applications.

The book is essential to all psychology researchers, practitioners, educators, and students with an interest in the mental health of older adults. In addition, health professionals - including psychiatrists, social workers, mental health nurses, and trainee geriatric mental heatlh workers - will find this a invaluable resource.

























Older adults comprise a growing percentage of the population worldwide. Clinical psychologists with an interest in older populations have increased the amount of research and applied knowledge about effectively improving mental health later in life, and this book captures that information on an international level. The book addresses how to diagnose, assess and treat mental illness in older persons, as well as ways to improve quality of life in all older persons. It has a great breadth of coverage of the area, including chapters spanning how research is conducted to how new technologies such as virtual reality and social media are used with older people to improve mental health. The book would appeal to all psychology researchers, practitioners, educators and students with an interest in the mental health of older adults. It would also appeal to other health professionals, including psychiatrists, social workers, and mental health nurses who work with older people. It is a valuable resource for trainee geriatric mental health workers because it highlights key readings and important practice implications in the field.
List of Contributors
xiii
PART I CLINICAL GEROPSYCHOLOGY: AN INTRODUCTION
1 Clinical Geropsychology: A Lifespan Perspective
3(23)
Eva-Marie Kessler
Andreas Kruse
Hans-Werner Wahl
2 The Demography and Epidemiology of Population Ageing
26(14)
John R. Beard
3 Longitudinal Studies and Clinical Geropsychology
40(22)
Kaarin J. Anstey
Alex BaharFuchs
Kerry SargentCox
4 Meta-analyses in Clinical Geropsychology
62(22)
Martin Pinquart
Silvia Sorensen
5 Successful Development and Ageing: Theory and Intervention
84(20)
Nardi Steverink
6 Social Capital and Gender: Critical Influences on Living Arrangements and Care-giving in Old Age
104(21)
Toni C. Antonucci
Kristine J. Ajrouch
Sojung Park
7 Cognitive Development in Ageing
125(19)
Jacqueline Zollig
Mike Martin
Vera Schumacher
8 Transitions in Later Life
144(19)
Karen Pallesgaard Munk
PART II ASSESSMENT AND FORMULATION
9 Interviewing Older Adults
163(21)
Lindsay A. Gerolimatos
Jeffrey J. Gregg
Barry A. Edelstein
10 Geropsychological Assessment
184(39)
Rocio Fernandez-Ballesteros
Maria Oliva Marquez
Marta Santacreu
11 Assessing Change of Cognitive Trajectories over Time in Later Life
223(25)
Dustin B. Hammers
Kevin Duff
Gordon J. Chelune
12 International Perspectives on Capacity Assessment
248(19)
MaryBeth Bailar-Heath
Jennifer Moye
13 Suicidal Ideation in Late Life
267(18)
Alisa A. O'Riley
Kimberly Van Orden
Yeates Conwell
14 Evaluation and Treatment of Geriatric Neurocognitive Disorders
285(21)
Phillip D. Ruppert
Deborah K. Attix
15 Functional Sequelae of Cognitive Decline in Later Life
306(29)
Holly A. Tuokko
Colette M. Smart
16 Older Adults and Long-Term Care: Trends and Challenges in Mental Health Treatment
335(20)
Elizabeth Vongxaiburana
Victor Molinari
Kathryn Hyer
17 Advanced Illness and the End of Life
355(26)
Julia E. KaslGodley
Kysa M. Christie
PART III SOURCES OF PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS
18 Loneliness and Health in Later Life
381(14)
Constanca Paul
19 Neuropsychiatric Approaches to Working with Depressed Older People
395(17)
Sergio E. Starkstein
Simone Brockman
20 Late-life Depression
412(24)
Elizabeth A. DiNapoli
Forrest R. Scogin
21 Physical Comorbidity with Mood Disorders
436(34)
Philip E. Mosley
Jeffrey M. Lyness
22 Late-life Anxiety
470(20)
Beyon Miloyan
Gerard J. Byrne
Nancy A. Pachana
23 Psychosis in Older Adults
490(14)
Jennifer Ceglowski
Laura Vergel deDios
Colin Depp
24 Disorders of Personality in Late-life
504(23)
Joel Sadavoy
25 Late-life Insomnia
527(22)
Megan E. Ruiter Petrov
Gregory S. Vander Wal
Kenneth L. Lichstein
26 Substance Use, Misuse, and Abuse: Special Issues for Older Adults
549(22)
Kristen L. Barry
Frederic C. Blow
27 Elder Abuse: A Global Epidemic
571(13)
Nageen Mustafa
Paul Kingston
28 Life Style Risks and Cognitive Health
584(19)
Yunhwan Lee
PART IV INTERVENTIONS
29 Cognitive-behaviour Therapy with Older People
603(19)
Ken Laidlaw
Larry W. Thompson
30 Interpersonal Psychotherapy for the Treatment of Late-Life Depression
622(15)
Gregory A. Hinrichsen
Marie-Genevieve Iselin
31 ACT and CBT in Older Age: Towards a Wise Synthesis
637(21)
David Gillanders
Ken Laidlaw
32 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy with Dementia Care-givers
658(17)
Maria Marquez-Gonzalez
Andres Losada Baltar
Rosa Romero-Moreno
33 Reminiscence Therapy: A Review
675(16)
Sunil S. Bhar
34 Cognitive Analytic Therapy and Later Life
691(19)
Michelle Hamill
Alistair Gaskell
35 Family Therapy with Ageing Families
710(23)
Sara Honn Qualls
36 Interprofessional Geriatric Healthcare: Competencies and Resources for Teamwork
733(20)
Ann M. Steffen
Antonette M. Zeiss
Michele J. Karel
37 The Use of CBT for Behaviours that Challenge in Dementia
753(23)
Ian A. James
38 Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Ageing: Considerations for Interventions
776(21)
Linda A. Travis
Douglas C. Kimmel
39 Caring for Care-givers of a Person with Dementia
797(40)
Marian Tzuang
Dolores Gallagher-Thompson
40 Cognitive Grief Therapy: Coping with the Inevitability of Loss and Grief in Later Life
837(19)
Ruth Malkinson
Liora Bar-Tur
41 Combining Medication and Psychotherapy for Late-life Anxiety and Mood Disorders
856(20)
Jill A. Stoddard
Christopher Barmann
Eric Lenze
Julie L. Wetherell
42 Pain in Persons with Dementia and Communication Impairment
876(35)
A. Lynn Snow
M. Lindsey Jacobs
PART V NEW HORIZONS
43 Psychological Interventions in Non-mental Health Settings
911(16)
Maria E. A. Armento
Melinda A. Stanley
44 Positive Ageing: New Horizons for Older Adults
927(22)
Liora Bar-Tur
Ruth Malkinson
45 Barriers to Mental Healthcare Utilization
949(21)
Candace Konnert
Ana Petrovic-Poljak
46 Seniors' Online Communities and Well-being in Later Life
970(20)
Galit Nimrod
47 Mobile Computing Technology in Rehabilitation Services
990(21)
Duncan R. Babbage
48 Virtual Reality Techniques in Older Adults: Exposure Therapy, Memory Training, and Training of Motor Balance
1011(14)
Katharina Meyerbroker
Paul M. G. Emmelkamp
49 Exercise and Health Promotion for Older Adults with Cognitive Impairment
1025(20)
Linda Teri
Susan M. McCurry
Rebecca G. Logsdon
Ellen L. McGough
50 Geropsychological Research and Practice in Mental Health in Mainland China
1045(19)
Dahua Wang
Xianmin Gong
51 Why We Need an International Clinical Geropsychology
1064(19)
Nancy A. Pachana
Index 1083
Nancy A. Pachana, PhD is Professor of Clinical Psychology and co-director of the Ageing Mind Initiative at The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Dr. Pachana's research and clinical work focuses broadly in the area of geriatric mental health, particularly late-life anxiety disorders. She co-developed the Geriatric Anxiety Inventory (GAI), a published short self-report inventory in wide clinical and research use globally, and translated into over two dozen languages. Her other research interests include novel empirical interventions in residential aged care and for caregivers, measurement of cognitive decline, and general health and well-being in later life. She has published 160+ original articles in peer-reviewed international journals, including 23 book chapters, and 1 authored and 3 edited books. Dr. Pachana mentors graduate and undergraduate student research and teaches courses on clinical geropsychology and leadership and clinical skills at her university.

Professor Laidlaw qualified as a clinical psychologist in 1995. In 1999 he was awarded a Winston Churchill Fellowship and travelled to the US to meet experts in CBT. From 1999 to 2000 he was invited to spend a year at University of Pennsylvania (PENN) in Philadelphia with Aaron T. Beck. In 2006 he completed his PhD part-time while working academically and clinically. Ken has always maintained a strong clinical commitment in the past and was professional lead for an older adults service in Edinburgh prior to his appointment at UEA. He was the Principal Investigator on the first UK RCT of CBT for late Life depression published in 2008. His manual for this trial has subsequently been used in other clinical trials. He also led the development of the creation of a cross-cultural Attitudes to Ageing Questionnaire (AAQ), that was pilot and field trialled in 20 countries worldwide. His conceptualization framework for CBT with older people is part of the IAPT curriculum materials for HI IAPT workers.