Top Banner
Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry Adam Younoszai, D. O. Medical Director of Behavioral Health Services Washington Adventist Hospital
25

Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Oct 01, 2020

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Religion & Spirituality

in Geriatric Psychiatry

Adam Younoszai, D. O.

Medical Director

of Behavioral Health Services

Washington Adventist Hospital

Page 2: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

• Words to pay attention to:

– Divides

– Trajectories

– “Provider”

– My “Rules” (relating to Narrative Medicine)

– Principles (relating to Narrative Medicine)

– RRICC (relating to psychotherapy)

Key Words

Page 3: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

• Divides

– Religion and Spirituality and Medicine

• Some incorporate (e.g., 12 step)

• Some do not incorporate (inpatient setting)

– Patient and Provider

• From provider to patient

• From patient to provider

Key Areas of Focus: Divides and Trajectories

Page 4: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

• Trajectory: Religion/Spiritual

– Positive:

• Support from God

• Support from Church

• Spiritual forgiveness

• Rituals

Key Areas of Focus: Divides and Trajectories

Page 5: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

• Trajectory: Religious/Spiritual

– Negative:

• Questions faith

• Increased stress from questioning fait

• Trajectory: Non-religious/non-spiritual

– Positive

• No need to question faith and God

• Accustomed to coping without religion and

spirituality

Key Areas of Focus: Divides and Trajectories

Page 6: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

• Trajectory: Non-religious/non-Spiritual

– Negative:

• Missed opportunity for 1-4 positive

religious and spiritual aspects above

• Ongoing /prolonged stress

• Decreased immune system functioning

• Decreased health-cycle

Key Areas of Focus: Divides and Trajectories

Page 7: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Addressing the Divides & Trajectories: Current

Movements

• Narrative Medicine

– Treatment through narration

– Connection to religion and spirituality

– Five principles and rules learned

1. Temporality: Take time to listen, care and

to recognize. Rule: Be present.

2. Singularity: Originality, “irreproducibility.”

Rule: Get to know the patient, not just the

disease

Page 8: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Addressing the Divides & Trajectories: Current

Movements

• Narrative Medicine

3. Causality/Contingency/Plot. Rule:

Understand context

4. Inter-subjectivity. Rule: Commune with

patient and be authentically present

5. Ethicality. Rule: Listen without judging,

except if harm is possible

Page 9: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Addressing the Divides & Trajectories: Current

Movements

• Religiously Integrated Psychotherapy

– First accepted: William James and G. Stanley Hall

– Then rejected for “pure science”: Freud-

Obsessional Neurosis, Skinner-negative

childhood experiences

– Now more integrated: Pargament and others,

2002 APA code of Ethics: Diversity, “Positive

Psychology” more embracing of religion and

spirituality.

Page 10: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Addressing the Divides & Trajectories: Current

Movements

• Divide In Need of a Bridge

– Most people are religious or spiritual

– Utilizing religion and spirituality can augment

psychotherapy to improve outcomes.

– RRICC Model

1. Respect

2. Responsibility

3. Integrity

4. Competence

5. Concern

Page 11: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Case Study

• History of Present Illness (HPI)

– 86-year-old Middle Eastern male with a history of

Major depressive disorder (MDD)

– Recently diagnosed with Gleason score 8

prostate cancer

– Consult placed to evaluate for depression and

possible treatment recommendations

– Patient admitted 5/9 for meeting criteria for major

depressive episode (MDE).

Page 12: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Case Study (continued)

• History of Present Illness (HPI) (continued)

– Denied use of drugs or alcohol

– No psychosis or mania history

– Some current anxiety symptoms

– Patient stated he felt alone when given diagnosis

• Past Medical History (PMH)

– GERD, Seasonal allergies/ asthma

• Past Psychiatric History (PPH)

– MDD (x2 prior episodes)

Page 13: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Case Study (continued)

• Family Psychiatric History (FPH)

– MDD, anxiety

– No psychosis or mania history

• Family Medical History (FMH)

– Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes,

father with colon cancer

• No Known Drug Allergies

• Social History (SH)

– Born and raised in Egypt to wealthy

parents/family

Page 14: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Case Study (continued)

• Social History (SH)

– Immigrated to the US at 18 for college

– Currently married with two adult (male) children

– Recently retired as anatomist at medical school

– Regularly exercises, hikes, and until recently ran

marathons

Page 15: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Case Study (continued)

• Mental Status Exam

– Young looking 86-year-old,

– Cooperative, pleasant, and engaged

– No psychomotor abnormalities

– Speech regular, mood “depressed”

– Affect: Mood congruent.

– Linear, logical, goal directed thought process

– Thought content free from si, hi, ah, or vh. Insight

appeared intact, as did judgment.

Page 16: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Case Study (continued)

• Diagnosis

– Currently depressed with MDD recurrence,

moderate

• My recommendations:

1. Check TSH

2. Start SSRI

3. Discuss sleep, and pain if any

4. Follow up with outpatient psychiatrist for meds

management

Page 17: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Patient’s Treatment Plan

• Patient’s plan

– Temporarily questioned his faith (negative

mentioned in start of talk)

– Began to pray

– Rented comedies

– Explored Sufism (mediation)

Page 18: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Patient Treatment Plan (continued)

– Poetry (Rumi)

• “Silence is the language of God. All else is

poor translation.”

• “Ignore those [things] that make you fearful

and sad, that degrade you back towards

disease and death.”

– Got surgery

– Engaged in “meaning making”

– Used the experience as an opportunity to educate

others and make a meaningful experience

Page 19: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Integrating Narrative Medicine in Treatment

• Narrative Medicine

– Rule from “Temporality”– I was present and took

time to listen

– Rule from “Singularity” – I got to know the patient,

not just the disease

• Active 86-year-old and good surgical

candidate

• Gleason 8 not the same in this patient

Page 20: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Integrating Narrative Medicine in Treatment

– Rule from “Causality/Contingency/Plot” –

Understand context

• Treated his own MDE in the past

• Trusted his desire to treat himself again, now

with prayer, poetry, and Sufisim.

– Rule from “Inter-subjectivity” – Be authentically

present

• Honest about rec. for SSRI still

• Patient knew where I stood with respect to my

proposed plan

Page 21: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Integrating Narrative Medicine In Treatment

– Rule from Ethicality: Do not judge

• Nothing ethically “wrong” with his preferences

for treatment

• I respected this decision

• Somewhat similar to authenticity?

Page 22: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

RRICC Model

• Respect

– Again, repeated who he was and his decision

• Prayer, poetry, laughter

• Responsibility

– My responsibility not to ignore his desire to take

religious/ spiritual trajectory

– My responsibility to try to incorporate his interest

in Sufism into care I gave him

– In retrospect, could have consulted Imam

Page 23: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

RRICC Model

• Integrity

– I was honest about my limitations to embrace

Islam as a faith nor to purport to be an expert

• Competence

– I read Rumi poetry and learned the basics about

Sufism

– Patient saw that I tried, this impacted him

Page 24: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

RRICC Model

• Concern

– I was somewhat vigilant (especially toward the

beginning) of his use of Islam

– I didn’t know Islam’s stance on suicide

Page 25: Religion & Spirituality in Geriatric Psychiatry · –No psychosis or mania history • Family Medical History (FMH) –Sister with breast cancer, mother with diabetes, father with

Conclusion

• Key takeaways

– I believe

– I wonder

– I know