Psychiatric Ethics in Late-Life Patients
Psychiatric Ethics in Late-Life Patients
Lastly, the older adults incarcerated in prisons is a group that is growing in numbers. They have unique needs at the intersection of the geriatric and forensic services, but are often marginalized by both services. The combination of poor quality of life and increasing costs makes the care of older adults in the criminal justice system makes this topic an important public health concern. There is a pressing need for better training of prison staff in issues of geriatric psychiatry. Assessment of criminal responsibility and competence to stand trial in aging offenders are other complex but under-studied issues.
This proposed book will provide a comprehensive view of ethical, medicolegal, and forensic issues that will be useful in clinical practice. There will be three sub-sections, each focusing on ethical, medicolegal and forensic issues respectively. The first section will focus on ethical issues. Its first chapters will provide an overview of the how age and the process of aging influence decision-making and introduce unique ethical dimensions to clinical care. This will be followed by a discussion of the concepts of informed consent and capacity evaluation. The next chapters will focus on common scenarios that arise in the care of elderly patients and offer a practical approach to understanding and managing them. These will include assessments of the capacity to make medical decisions, the capacity to live independently, manage finances, drive a vehicle, have sexual relations etc. A chapter on ethical issues specific to dementia will outline issues related to diagnostic disclosure and genetic testing. Research ethics issues in geriatric psychiatry will also be outlined.
The next section of the book will focus on surrogate decision making in an older adult who has been deemed to lack the capacity to serve one or more functions independently. The first chapters in this sub-section will focus on patient directed advance health care planning tools, namely, living will and power of attorney. This will be followed by an overview of default surrogate making. Guardianship will subsequently be covered. A separate chapter will cover the issue of elder abuse and discuss an approach to assessing it.
The last section of the book will cover forensic issues in geriatric psychiatry. The first chapter will discuss aging older adults in the criminal justice system from an epidemiological perspective. The growing numbers of incarcerated older adults, their illness burden, the challenges in the diagnosis and management of neurocognitive disorders in the prison setting will be elucidated. The following chapter will discuss competence to stand trial with reference to elderly offenders. This will be followed by a discussion of the concepts of medical reprieve, compassionate release as well as model programs and policies currently in the works for older incarcerated adults.
Meera Balasubramaniam, MD, MPH
Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, New York University School of Medicine
Director, Geriatric Psychiatry Fellowship, New York University School of Medicine
One Park Avenue, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10016
Aarti Gupta, M.D.
Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry
Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT
Yale Psychiatric Hospital
184 Liberty Street, New Haven
CT 06519
Rajesh R. Tampi, MD, MS, DFAPA
Chairman, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences
Cleveland Clinic Akron General
Chief, Section for Geriatric Psychiatry, Cleveland Clinic
Professor of Medicine, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University
0208 Rosalee Lane, Strongsville, Ohio 44136
Balasubramaniam, Meera
Gupta, Aarti
Tampi, Rajesh R.
ISBN | 9783030151720 |
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Artikelnummer | 9783030151720 |
Medientyp | E-Book - PDF |
Copyrightjahr | 2019 |
Verlag | Springer-Verlag |
Umfang | 246 Seiten |
Sprache | Englisch |
Kopierschutz | Digitales Wasserzeichen |