Cognitive and behavioural skills help elderly to cope with depression, new study shows.
Cognitive and behavioural skills help elderly to cope with depression, new Australian study shows.
The research at the Macquarie University’s Centre for Emotional Health, Sydney demonstrates conclusively that both anxiety and low mood can be reduced simultaneously in older adults and significantly improve their general wellbeing.Up to 50 per cent of older adults experience at least some symptoms of anxiety or low mood/depression. However, when they occur together, outcomes in physical and mental health and wellbeing have more far-reaching consequences than when they occur separately and can lead to risk of suicide, death, disability, medication use and dementia.
The Ageing Wisely treatment program, run at the Macquarie University, has been conducting research as well as teaching older adults how to combat feelings of fatigue, loneliness, sadness and anxiety. Similar programs already teach coping strategies to children and younger adults, but until now, little research had examined whether the same skills are beneficial to older adults (over 60 years old).
The results from a randomised control trial run by the varsity over the past two years reveal that teaching older adults the cognitive and behavioural skills to manage these feelings led to significant improvement in both anxiety and low mood in the study participants who completed the group treatment program.
Most significantly, follow up of study participants three months later showed that their treatment gains were long-lasting.
“The success of this treatment trial is uplifting as we now know that older adults can benefit from psychological treatment, and that they no longer need to accept worry, low mood and loneliness as a normal part of ageing,” said Dr Viviana Wuthrich who lead the study.
Advertisement
Advertisement