Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry

Dementia with over 46 million people suffering from it has become an illness which cannot be ignored. The confusion regarding whether dementia is a neurological or a psychiatric illness has been existing for a long. Conventionally, dementia has been viewed as a neurological illness with the organici...

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Main Author: Ajit Avasthi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2018-01-01
Series:Journal of Geriatric Mental Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jgmh.org/article.asp?issn=2348-9995;year=2018;volume=5;issue=1;spage=10;epage=15;aulast=Avasthi
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spelling doaj-1c0bd2ced1e34d2cae2853cf2b4fdeb02020-11-24T21:35:58ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsJournal of Geriatric Mental Health2348-99952395-33222018-01-0151101510.4103/jgmh.jgmh_31_17Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatryAjit AvasthiDementia with over 46 million people suffering from it has become an illness which cannot be ignored. The confusion regarding whether dementia is a neurological or a psychiatric illness has been existing for a long. Conventionally, dementia has been viewed as a neurological illness with the organicity of the same being given utmost importance. However, we cannot ignore the vast contribution of psychiatry in the discovery of dementia. Furthermore, the new concept regarding psychiatric and neurological illnesses has challenged the fact that dementia is a completely neurological illness, especially considering the vast similarities between psychiatric disorders and dementia. This confusion regarding whether it is a neurological or a psychiatric illness has created difficulty in the management of these patients. The similarities between dementia and psychiatric disorders are visible at the level of localization of lesions, the symptoms, especially the behavioral and the psychotic symptoms, the methods of diagnosis, and the treatment strategies, especially the nonpharmacological ones, which are in fact more effective than the pharmacological strategies. The nonpharmacological aspects include not only behavioral strategies but also focus on breaking the bad news and addressing the caregiver burden and the legal aspects. All this puts a psychiatrist at an advantage in treating these patients, when compared to other specialists, given our expertise with history taking, mental status examination, pharmacological management of the behavioral issues, and especially nonpharmacological aspects.http://www.jgmh.org/article.asp?issn=2348-9995;year=2018;volume=5;issue=1;spage=10;epage=15;aulast=AvasthiCaredementiaIndia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ajit Avasthi
spellingShingle Ajit Avasthi
Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
Journal of Geriatric Mental Health
Care
dementia
India
author_facet Ajit Avasthi
author_sort Ajit Avasthi
title Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
title_short Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
title_full Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
title_fullStr Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
title_full_unstemmed Bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
title_sort bringing dementia-care back into psychiatry
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Journal of Geriatric Mental Health
issn 2348-9995
2395-3322
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Dementia with over 46 million people suffering from it has become an illness which cannot be ignored. The confusion regarding whether dementia is a neurological or a psychiatric illness has been existing for a long. Conventionally, dementia has been viewed as a neurological illness with the organicity of the same being given utmost importance. However, we cannot ignore the vast contribution of psychiatry in the discovery of dementia. Furthermore, the new concept regarding psychiatric and neurological illnesses has challenged the fact that dementia is a completely neurological illness, especially considering the vast similarities between psychiatric disorders and dementia. This confusion regarding whether it is a neurological or a psychiatric illness has created difficulty in the management of these patients. The similarities between dementia and psychiatric disorders are visible at the level of localization of lesions, the symptoms, especially the behavioral and the psychotic symptoms, the methods of diagnosis, and the treatment strategies, especially the nonpharmacological ones, which are in fact more effective than the pharmacological strategies. The nonpharmacological aspects include not only behavioral strategies but also focus on breaking the bad news and addressing the caregiver burden and the legal aspects. All this puts a psychiatrist at an advantage in treating these patients, when compared to other specialists, given our expertise with history taking, mental status examination, pharmacological management of the behavioral issues, and especially nonpharmacological aspects.
topic Care
dementia
India
url http://www.jgmh.org/article.asp?issn=2348-9995;year=2018;volume=5;issue=1;spage=10;epage=15;aulast=Avasthi
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