How well do older adults recognise mental illness? A literature review

Older adults tend to underutilise mental health services. Mental health literacy plays a critical role in identifying and overcoming barriers to accessing mental health care. The ability to recognise mental illness is an essential component of mental health literacy, with important implications to w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychogeriatrics 2019-09, Vol.19 (5), p.491-504
Hauptverfasser: Malkin, Gali, Hayat, Tsahi, Amichai‐Hamburger, Yair, Ben‐David, Boaz M., Regev, Tali, Nakash, Ora
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container_end_page 504
container_issue 5
container_start_page 491
container_title Psychogeriatrics
container_volume 19
creator Malkin, Gali
Hayat, Tsahi
Amichai‐Hamburger, Yair
Ben‐David, Boaz M.
Regev, Tali
Nakash, Ora
description Older adults tend to underutilise mental health services. Mental health literacy plays a critical role in identifying and overcoming barriers to accessing mental health care. The ability to recognise mental illness is an essential component of mental health literacy, with important implications to whether the person will seek professional help. We conducted a review of the literature on older adults’ abilities to recognise mental illness. Of the 421 papers that were retrieved in the comprehensive search in PubMed, 32 studies met inclusion criteria. Studies were heterogeneous in terms of target population and methodology, yet findings show that older adults are less likely to correctly recognise mental disorders. Cueing older participants with mental labels improved their recognition abilities. Recognition was particularly poor among immigrant and ethnic/racial older adults, likely due to linguistic and cultural barriers. Our findings demonstrate that older adults show low levels of mental illness recognition and tend to view some illnesses as normal parts of aging. Findings emphasise the need for developing educational programs tailored by the specific phenomenology, conceptualisations and cultural meanings of mental illness among older adults, with attention to informal sources of information and social networks.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/psyg.12427
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subjects Aged
Aging
Health education
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Health Literacy
Humans
Literature reviews
Mental Disorders
mental health
Mental health care
mental health literacy (MHL)
Older people
review
Social organization
symptom recognition
title How well do older adults recognise mental illness? A literature review
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