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The Management and Nature of Depressive Illnesses in Late Life: A Follow-Through Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2018

Felix Post*
Affiliation:
The Bethlem Royal Hospital and the Maudsley Hospital, London, S.E.5

Extract

Since the long-term results of the treatment of elderly depressives admitted to the writer's care between 1949 and 1951 were communicated (1962), further experiences (e.g. Colwell and Post, 1959; Post, 1968) have confirmed that affective illnesses in late life are associated with much subsequent mental invalidism and needs for further treatment. It was hoped that these needs might be met by increased use of out-patient and community care as well as by the introduction of thymoleptic drugs. A follow-up investigation of a further consecutive series of depressives over the age of 60 receiving inpatient treatment from the same psychiatrist in the same hospital during the years 1966–67 was undertaken with the following aims in view:

Firstly, it was intended to test the proposition that the less reluctant use of electro-convulsive therapy in old persons, as well as the introduction of antidepressant drugs and of more active after-care measures, had improved the long term outlook in the affective illnesses of late life. It was realized that a comparison of two series of patients separated from one another by some 15 years might be vitiated by differences between the samples other than those due to changed methods of treatment. It would, however, have been unethical to withhold the new forms of management from a control group.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1972 

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