Badcock Johanna C, Dehon Hedwige, Larøi Frank
Centre for Clinical Research in Neuropsychiatry, Division of Psychiatry, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, The University of Western AustraliaPerth, WA, Australia.
Australia and Perth Voices Clinic, Murdoch University Child and Adult Psychology Service, Murdoch UniversityMurdoch, WA, Australia.
Front Psychol. 2017 Jul 7;8:1134. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01134. eCollection 2017.
➢ Studies suggest a substantial minority of healthy older adults have hallucinatory experiences, in line with existing evidence on hallucinations in other age groups, though it is still unclear if hallucination prevalence increases or declines with age in older cohorts.➢ Stigma attached to both hallucinations and ageing leads to considerable under-reporting of these experiences in healthy older adults and may negatively bias how professionals, family members, and the public respond.➢ Why and when hallucinations in healthy older adults remit, persist, or progress to other clinical disorders remains poorly understood.➢ Current evidence points to a range of factors associated with hallucinations in older adults including decline in sensory or cognitive functioning, poor sleep, and psychosocial stressors (e.g., social isolation, loneliness, and bereavement), highlighting the need for accurate assessment and tailored interventions. Hallucinations, though common in youth and younger adults, are not the preserve of these age groups. Accumulating evidence shows that hallucinatory experiences are also present at surprisingly high rates in healthy older adults in the general community. Furthermore, stigma and misunderstanding of hallucinations, together with ageism, may lead to under-reporting of these experiences by older adults, and misdiagnosis or mismanagement by health and mental health practitioners. Consequently, improved public and professional knowledge is needed about the nature and significance of hallucinations with advancing age. The purpose of this review is to provide a comprehensive overview, and critical analysis, of research on the prevalence, psychosocial, and neurobiological factors associated with hallucinations in people aged 60 years and over. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first review of its kind in the literature. The evidence supports a dynamic conceptualization of hallucinations, in which the emergence of hallucinations is viewed as a balance between the sensory, cognitive, or social impairments accompanying advancing age and the degree to which compensatory processes elicited by these impairments are successful. We briefly summarize the implications of the literature for aged care services and interventions, and stress that far more studies are needed in this important field of research.
➢ 研究表明,相当一部分健康的老年人有幻觉体验,这与其他年龄组幻觉的现有证据一致,不过在老年人群体中,幻觉患病率是否随年龄增长而增加或下降仍不清楚。
➢ 与幻觉和衰老相关的污名化导致健康老年人对这些体验的报告严重不足,并可能对专业人员、家庭成员和公众的反应产生负面偏见。
➢ 健康老年人的幻觉为何以及何时缓解、持续存在或发展为其他临床疾病,目前仍知之甚少。
➢ 目前的证据表明,一系列与老年人幻觉相关的因素包括感觉或认知功能下降、睡眠不佳以及心理社会压力源(如社会隔离、孤独和丧亲之痛),这凸显了准确评估和针对性干预的必要性。幻觉虽然在年轻人中很常见,但并非这些年龄组所特有。越来越多的证据表明,普通社区中健康的老年人出现幻觉体验的比例也出奇地高。此外,对幻觉的污名化和误解,加上年龄歧视,可能导致老年人对这些体验的报告不足,以及健康和心理健康从业者的误诊或管理不当。因此,需要提高公众和专业人员对随着年龄增长幻觉的性质和重要性的认识。本综述的目的是全面概述并批判性分析与60岁及以上人群幻觉相关的患病率、心理社会和神经生物学因素的研究。据我们所知,这是文献中首次此类综述。证据支持对幻觉的动态概念化,其中幻觉的出现被视为随着年龄增长伴随的感觉、认知或社会损害与这些损害引发的代偿过程成功程度之间的平衡。我们简要总结了文献对老年护理服务和干预措施的影响,并强调在这个重要的研究领域还需要更多的研究。