Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-f46jp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-11T13:09:51.926Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Patrick Ryan and Barry J. Coughlan (eds), Ageing and Older Adult Mental Health: Issues and Implications for Practice, Routledge, Hove, UK, 2011, 296 pp., pbk £21.99, ISBN 13: 978 0 415 58290 2.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2012

BARRY AVEYARD
Affiliation:
Sheffield Hallam University, UK
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

This concise book is a useful addition to the seemingly ever-growing number of books published on the subject of older adults' mental health. It takes a broad approach to covering the range of subjects that might be expected within such a textbook. Within its 15 chapters it provides a broad overview of current issues in the field of caring for older adults with mental health issues. The book is aimed at ‘mental health professionals’. This can be viewed as a strength as it does not have a bias towards any one profession: conversely some readers might possibly find the book too generic and prefer a text that is more specific to their own profession within the field of practice.

Yet the book does include some chapters which are slightly different from the usual, covering, for example, the paradox of ageing and the relationship between older and younger generations: it is these chapters that for me make the book stand out from similar texts that already exist in this field of practice. I particularly like the way that the book begins with a chapter taking an historical perspective on how society has approached older people's mental health issues. This I think is very useful in putting the issues into context, and helps any reader who is new to the subject area to contextualise current developments by having insight into where practice has developed from within recent history.

From this initial perspective the book goes on to cover the range of subjects that might be expected in such a relatively concise volume, ranging from biology to grief loss and bereavement issues. The usefulness of the chapters in my view is a little variable. Chapter Five on the treatment of mental health issues is, from my perspective, rather ‘medical model’ in approach and fails to engage in psycho-social interventions in as much detail as I would have liked. By contrast Chapter Fifteen, on ‘older and younger generations’, is innovative and fresh and I think provides a stimulating read, leaving one with lots of issues to consider about one's own attitudes to older people and how these impact upon one's practice.

A textbook on older people's mental health which is generic rather than focusing on more specific elements may present challenges to any author or editor working in this field, but on the whole this text manages the fine-balancing act rather well. Although depression does have its own focus in Chapter Eight, I would have liked to see a stronger focus on dementia: there is no specific chapter on it, and neither is there any specific detailed focus on such issues as schizophrenia or bi-polar conditions in older adults. These are significant issues which are only addressed in a limited way within the book.

However, putting these minor criticisms aside, this is a stimulating, readable and useful addition to the existing range of texts in this field of practice, with a couple of chapters that are outstanding and novel, and I believe add something new and exciting. These will really challenge readers to reflect upon and as a result develop their own approach to practice. It is therefore a book that deserves to do well and has the potential to make a significant contribution to the care of older adults with mental health issues