SUMMARY
This article aims to clarify crucial issues pertaining to community and institution-based psychosocial care provided to elders suffering from mental health problems, and to the role of professional and lay systems of beliefs—i.e., representations—in this area of intervention. First, we review epidemiological, clinical, and evaluative data assessing the prevalence of mental health problems (both situational or transitional distress and severe mental health problems, with a special emphasis on the latter) among persons aged 65 and older, the specific situations and needs of this population, and the services provided to them. We then examine three promising and interrelated trends in psychosocial intervention aimed at seniors with mental health problems, that is, practices oriented toward recovery, empowerment, and social integration. Finally, we tackle the cumulative impacts of social representations of aging and the aged and of mental illness and the mentally ill, and how they can impede the implementation of interventions, services and programs based on recovery, empowerment and social integration approaches.
We would like to thank research assistants Véronique Lagrange, Fanny Leblanc, and Nicolas Vonaryx for their help in the preparation of this article.
Notes
Allot, P., Loganathan, L., & Fulford, K.W.M. (2002[2004]). Discovering hope for recovery from a British perspective: A review of a selection of recovery literature, implications for practice and systems change. In S. Lurie, M. McCubbin, & B. Dallaire (Eds.), Innovation in community mental health: international perspectives/Innovations en santé mentale communautaire: Perspectives internationales [special issue]. Canadian Journal of Community Mental Health/Revue canadienne de santémentale communautaire, 21(3), 13–33.
Dallaire, B., McCubbin, M., Carpentier, N., & Clément, M. (2004). Les représentations des problématiques gérontologie-santémentale chez les intervenants psychosociaux des milieux institutionnels et communautaires [representations of problématiques gerontology-mental health among psychosocial practitioners from institutional and community settings]. Research funding submission to the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.