Centre for Policy on Ageing
 

 

Fear of dementia
 — implications for assessment and intervention in a memory clinic service
Author(s)Karen B E Addy
Journal titlePSIGE Newsletter, no 119, April 2012
PublisherPsychologists' Special Interest Group in Elderly People - PSIGE, British Psychological Society, April 2012
Pagespp 32-37
Sourcehttp://www.psige.org.uk
KeywordsDementia ; Anxiety ; Mental ageing ; Geriatric out-patients clinics ; Case studies.
AnnotationCognitive decline associated with ageing is a common cause for anxiety within the older adult age group. Often, patients will be referred to services with concerns about memory loss and in some case suffering significant emotional and functional problems as a result of a fear of the meaning of memory lapses. This paper explores three cases of patients with a fear of dementia in which the patients' functional ability was. impaired as a result of their interpretation of memory decline as a sign of dementia. The patients attended a memory clinic service and completed a neuropsychological assessment, which indicated no evidence of cognitive decline. Psychological assessment suggested specific health anxiety related to dementia. A cognitive behavioural intervention was completed. Each reported significant functional improvement and a reduction in memory-related anxiety. A cognitive model exploring the interaction between memory loss and anxiety is proposed; and the implications for the treatment of such patients are discussed. (RH)
Accession NumberCPA-121009209 A
ClassmarkEA: ENP: D6: L6G: 69P

Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing

...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing.
 

CPA home >> Ageinfo Database >> Queries to: webmaster@cpa.org.uk