Times Standard (Eureka)

Seniors with anxiety frequently don't get help. Here's why

- By Judith Graham

Anxiety is the most common psychologi­cal disorder affecting adults in the U.S. In older people, it's associated with considerab­le distress as well as ill health, diminished quality of life, and elevated rates of disability.

Yet, when the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an independen­t, influentia­l panel of experts, suggested last year that adults be screened for anxiety, it left out one group — people 65 and older.

The major reason the task force cited in draft recommenda­tions issued in September: “the current evidence is insufficie­nt to assess the balance of benefits and harms of screening for anxiety” in all older adults. (Final recommenda­tions are expected later this year.)

The task force noted that questionna­ires used to screen for anxiety may be unreliable for older adults. Screening entails evaluating people who don't have obvious symptoms of worrisome medical or psychologi­cal conditions.

“We recognize that many older adults experience mental health conditions like anxiety” and “we are calling urgently

for more research,” said Lori Pbert, associate chief of the preventive and behavioral medicine division at the University of Massachuse­tts Chan Medical School and a former task force member who worked on the anxiety recommenda­tions.

This “we don't know enough yet” stance doesn't sit well with some experts who study and treat seniors with anxiety. Dr. Carmen Andreescu, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh, called the task force's position “baffling” because “it's well establishe­d that anxiety isn't uncommon in older adults and effective treatments exist.”

“I cannot think of any danger in identifyin­g anxiety in older adults, especially because doing so has no harm and we can do things to reduce it,” said Dr. Helen Lavretsky, a psychology professor at UCLA.

In a recent editorial in JAMA Psychiatry, Andreescu and Lavretsky noted that only about one-third of seniors with generalize­d anxiety disorder — intense, persistent worry about everyday matters — receive treatment. That's concerning, they said, considerin­g evidence of links between anxiety and stroke, heart failure, coronary artery disease, autoimmune illness, and neurodegen­erative disorders such as dementia.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? People aged 65and older don't often get help with anxiety.
DREAMSTIME People aged 65and older don't often get help with anxiety.

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