The prevalence of mental disorders among older people is greater than previously assumed

“We started with the assumption that valid diagnostic methods for adults are less suitable for the diagno-sis of mental disorders in elderly people”, lead scientist Professor Sylke Andreas (Department of Psychol-ogy at the Alpen-Adria-Universität) explains. She coordinated the investigation together with Professor Martin Härter, Dr. Jana Volkert and Professor Holger Schulz (Department of Medical Psychology at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf). When confronted with traditional diagnostic tools, older people soon struggle to remain attentive. What is more, the questions included in established diagnostic methods are often rather long and complicated, further adding to the difficulties experienced by the elderly.

As a first step, the research team, comprising scientists from Spain, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, Israel and Switzerland, developed a new diagnostic tool in the shape of a computer-based interview with sim-plified sentences. Subsequently, this method was used to examine 3,100 elderly people (65 to 85 years old) in Spain, Great Britain, Germany, Italy, Israel and Switzerland.

The results revealed a prevalence of mental disorders in older people that is significantly higher than had been previously assumed: At the time of the interviews, one third of the respondents had suffered from a mental disorder within the previous year (one year prevalence) and one quarter of the respond-ents was diagnosed with a current mental disorder. The most common disorders experienced by the re-spondents in the preceding twelve months were anxiety disorders (17 per cent) and depressive disorders (14 per cent).

According to Sylke Andreas, these results are cause for grave concern, particularly when considered against the background of the health services provided so far. “We need better and more reliable meth-ods to determine whether an older person is suffering from a mental disorder. This goes hand in hand with the urgent need to establish a range of psychotherapeutic services for the elderly, which has been almost entirely absent to date.”

Reference
Sylke Andreas, Holger Schulz, Jana Volkert, Maria Dehoust, Susanne Sehner, Anna Suling, Berta Ausín, Alessandra Canuto, Mike Crawford, Chiara Da Ronch, Luigi Grassi, Yael Hershkovitz, Manuel Muñoz, Alan Quirk, Ora Rotenstein, Ana Belén Santos-Olmo, Arieh Shalev, Jens Strehle, Kerstin Weber, Karl Wegscheider, Hans-Ulrich Wittchen, Martin Härter (2016). Prevalence of mental disorders in elderly peo-ple: the European MentDis_ICF65+ study. The British Journal of Psychiatry September 2016, bjp.bp.115.180463. DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.115.180463e

Scroll to Top
Scroll to Top