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Home » MA » Boston MA » Depression

Depression Psychoanalysts for Seniors Boston MA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Depression Psychoanalysts for Seniors. You will find informative articles about Depression Psychoanalysts for Seniors, including "Elderly depression: are doctors and patients failing to connect?" and "Elderly depression: The age factor in depression". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Boston, MA that can help answer your questions about Depression Psychoanalysts for Seniors.

Local Companies
Elderly depression: are doctors and patients failing to connect?
Elderly depression: The age factor in depression

Local Companies

Louis Vachon, MD
617-638-8173
85 E Newton St
Boston, MA
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Louis Vachon, MD
617-638-8173
85 E Newton St
Boston, MA 02118

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ De Montreal, Fac De Med, Montreal, Que, Canada
Graduation Year: 1958
Hospital
Hospital: Boston Med Ctr -E Newton Ca, Boston, Ma
Group Practice: Boston Medical Ctr

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Ana Maria Rizzuto, MD
617-232-5363
10 Rogers St Apt 321
Cambridge, MA
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Ana Maria Rizzuto, MD
617-232-5363
10 Rogers St Apt 321
Cambridge, MA 02142

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Univ Nac De Cordoba, Fac De Cien Med, Cordoba, Argentina
Graduation Year: 1959

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Paul Hermann Ornstein, MD
617-738-2927
60 Longwood Ave Apt 509
Brookline, MA
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Paul Hermann Ornstein, MD
617-738-2927
60 Longwood Ave Apt 509
Brookline, MA 02446

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Med Fak Der Univ Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
Graduation Year: 1951

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Gary N Goldsmith, MD
617-731-6888
1419 Beacon St
Brookline, MA
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Gary N Goldsmith, MD
617-731-6888
1419 Beacon St
Brookline, MA 02446

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Georgetown Univ Sch Of Med, Washington Dc 20007
Graduation Year: 1973

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Frederick L Meisel, MD
617-492-1030
1330 Beacon St
Brookline, MA
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Frederick L Meisel, MD
617-492-1030
1330 Beacon St
Brookline, MA 02446

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: A Einstein Coll Of Med Of Yeshiva Univ, Bronx Ny 10461
Graduation Year: 1968

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Edward Messner, MD
617-227-0432
0 Emerson Pl
Boston, MA
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Edward Messner, MD
617-227-0432
0 Emerson Pl
Boston, MA 02114

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Harvard Med Sch, Boston Ma 02115
Graduation Year: 1954

Data Provided by:
 
Stuart Theodore Hauser, MD
617-278-4294
53 Parker Hill Ave
Roxbury Xing, MA
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Stuart Theodore Hauser, MD
617-278-4294
53 Parker Hill Ave
Roxbury Xing, MA 02120

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Yale Univ Sch Of Med, New Haven Ct 06510
Graduation Year: 1966

Data Provided by:
 
Leon N Shapiro, MD
2 Saint Paul St Apt 404
Brookline, MA
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Leon N Shapiro, MD
2 Saint Paul St Apt 404
Brookline, MA 02446

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Boston Univ Sch Of Med, Boston Ma 02118
Graduation Year: 1948

Data Provided by:
 
Robert David Mehlman, MD
617-232-0073
20 Netherlands Rd
Brookline, MA
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Robert David Mehlman, MD
617-232-0073
20 Netherlands Rd
Brookline, MA 02445

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Harvard Med Sch, Boston Ma 02115
Graduation Year: 1955

Data Provided by:
 
Padraic Burns, MD
617-232-0109
9 Downing Rd
Brookline, MA
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Padraic Burns, MD
617-232-0109
9 Downing Rd
Brookline, MA 02445

Specialties
Psychiatry, Psychoanalysis
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Yale Univ Sch Of Med, New Haven Ct 06510
Graduation Year: 1955

Data Provided by:
 
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Elderly depression: are doctors and patients failing to connect?

03/23/2010 - Articles

By: Heinz Redwood

"It is unacceptable for depression to be dismissed as a natural consequence of ageing. Never again should a GP explain to an older person that depression is something they should expect at their age." Age Concern England 1 .

"La dépression chez la personne âgée est souvent méconnue ou tardivement reconnue et insuffisamment traitée." ["Elderly depression is often misunderstood or recognised belatedly and inadequately treated."] 2 .

These quotations from the literature of Elderly Depression could be multiplied ad lib. They represent serious problems in the relationship between doctors and elderly patients in primary care where depression is generally the place of initial diagnosis and treatment. Specialists, psychiatrists and hospitals will normally enter at a later stage, especially in countries where the GP acts as 'gatekeeper' to secondary and tertiary care.

On the one hand, Age Concern 's campaign expresses anger at the attitude of those doctors who have already diagnosed elderly depression or accepted the patients' self-diagnosis, but regard the condition as 'natural at your age'. This message - tantamount to 'Keeping a Stiff Upper Lip' - is close to a century out of date and will surely make nine out of ten elderly patients more depressed than when they first asked their doctor for help.

Obstacles to effective diagnosis

However, the concept of elderly depression as a natural phenomenon of ageing is probably less widespread than the sheer difficulty in general practice of accurately diagnosing the condition and the patient's type and stage of depression: minor, major, episodic or chronic, double depression , depressive symptoms, or at the borderline between depression and dementia. Most GPs are not trained in the intricacies of elderly depression, and the customary few minutes spent face-to-face by doctor and patient will tend to confirm each in their preconceived attitudes and provoke disagreement.

The observation that many of the present cohort of elderly patients will conceal their depression (not only from doctors but also from themselves) is widely reported. A fictional case study of a 78-year-old widower who has lost interest in life and eventually commits suicide, is described by Bruce & Pearson 3 . It illustrates what can go wrong when "depression remains unrecognized by the patient and the primary care physician". This patient is not visibly depressed but has withdrawn from previously enjoyable activities and from his responsibilities; his comorbidities make detection of depression more difficult and take priority in the doctor's limited time with the patient; and the fear of stigma induces the patient to deny depression.

The use of screening scales

The problem is not lack of knowledge. Numerous screening tools are available and are widely regarded as capable of detecting depression by docto...

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Elderly depression: The age factor in depression

03/23/2010 - Articles

By: Heinz Redwood

Elderly depression: The age factor in depression 2/4

Depression does not become more common as you get older, but it may become more complex.  Recent findings on age and depression confirm the so-called ‘U-curve’ of well being and happiness over the human life cycle.  Put simply, we’re at our most dissatisfied in our mid-forties – a finding that’s so in 47 of 55 countries surveyed. Depression seems to have much less of an impact in terms of daily disability in the older age groups.

But depression in the elderly is complicated by other diseases and it’s often hard to sort out cause and effect. Do you get depressed because you’ve had a heart attack? Does depression make it more likely that you’ll get diabetes ? We really don’t know! Elderly depression is not so much about the numbers of people who are depressed, but more a matter of knowing how best to treat it.  Higher costs in terms of time, money and health care resources are involved in treating elderly depression and, too often, such resources simply aren’t adequate.  Moreover, the growing number of people over 60 (and, proportionately, even more so those over 80), means that elderly depression is set to rise dramatically. As yet, society seems unprepared for this.   Recent findings from the Zürich Study of younger persons (stretching over 20 years and with an age range of 20-41) have pointed to high levels of chronic depression existing alongside heart and lung problems, insomnia, pain (other than backache and headache) and sexual problems. Interestingly, the authors ascribe the heart and lung problems   in this age group as probably ‘associated with increased anxiety’.

In the elderly, by contrast, depression tends to exist alongside age-related conditions like stroke, high blood pressure, atrial fibrillation, diabetes, cancer and dementia.

The Zürich Study also found that other mental health problems co-exist with depression in the   20-41 age group. The six leading risk factors were found to be tobacco dependence, substance abuse, generalized anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive syndrome, panic attacks and alcohol use disorder. Again, with the exception of anxiety, these are probably more prominent risk factors for depression in younger persons than for the elderly. The psychosocial impact of bereavement, loneliness and growing physical and cognitive problems in coping with the normal activities of daily life are more characteristic associations with depression in old age.

The next article in this series looks at current   practice in the diagnosis and treatment of elderly depression.

Sources:

J. Angst, A. Gamma et al, “Long-term depression versus episodic major depression: results from the prospective Zürich study of a community sample”, J. Affective Disorders 115, 112-121, 2009
N. G. Choi & J. S. Kim, “Age group differences in...

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