Be Kind to Your Mind: How Seniors can Stave Off Mental Decline

In a world where the pandemic has turned long-held social norms and ways of living upside down, ageing is far from an easy process, not least in the way it affects the mental health of the elderly. Two experts explore how to care for ageing minds in this excerpt from their recent book Rethink Ageing

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In a world where the pandemic has turned long-held social norms and ways of living upside down, ageing is far from an easy process, not least in the way it affects the mental health of the elderly. Two experts explore how to care for ageing minds in this excerpt from their recent book Rethink Ageing

Daddy had always been Sangeeta John’s world. John, a Mumbai-based former journalist, lost her mother at an early age. Her father was a single parent and a mining engineer who raised her with love and affection and retained his sharp and analytical mind well into post-retirement. When he repeatedly started to complain about physical ailments that seemed to have no solution despite umpteen doctor visits and distancing himself from her, John sought out psychological help. Eventually, her father was diagnosed with anxiety. John has always been an aware daughter, clued to her father’s health needs. Yet it took her time to get the right diagnosis, because everyone—including her—focused on his physical health first.

Geriatric psychiatrist Dr Santosh Bangar isn’t surprised when we shared this with him. As one of the few trained liaison psychiatrists for older adults in India, Mumbai-based Dr Bangar works closely with general physicians in hospitals and often comes across older adults who have auditory and visual hallucinations, like Shoma’s father. He says we seldom realize that imbalanced physiological parameters can also manifest as mental-health issues and vice versa. ICU psychosis or delirium is a state of acute confusion, where older adults can become aggressive, agitated, paranoid and hallucinate because of physical imbalances. It is extremely common.’ In our classic focus on physical health, more so for older adults, we often forget that the mind needs as much care and attention as does the body.

With older people, problems can run the risk of being brushed away under the carpet of ‘old-age issues’ even by the most empathetic families. We couldn’t be more wrong. Geriatric psychiatrists say the most common mental-health issues they come across in older adults are depression, delirium, anxiety-related issues and disorders related to substance abuse and addiction, lack of sleep and chronic pa...

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