Abraham I L, Buckwalter K C, Snustad D G, Smullen D E, Thompson-Heisterman A A, Neese J B, Smith M
University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Int Psychogeriatr. 1993 Fall;5(2):203-11. doi: 10.1017/s104161029300153x.
Elderly residents of rural areas are at significant risk for mental health problems, yet have less access to mental health services. Thus, most mental health problems among rural elderly remain either undiagnosed or untreated. We describe two models of mental health outreach programs to rural elderly in Iowa and Virginia, serving demographically, culturally, and epidemiologically different populations in geographically and economically dissimilar regions. Programs are compared on the basis of initiation, community partnerships, target population, target region, clinical disciplines involved, coordinating discipline, referral sources, operational model, initial home assessment, care planning, sustainability, cost, patient demographics, and primary and secondary diagnosed. Outreach programs are argued to be effective models of delivering services to geographically and/or socially isolated elderly populations. The experiences of our programs, though limited to rural populations, may be of relevance to any outreach program attempting to serve elderly presenting with or at risk for mental health problems.
农村地区的老年居民面临心理健康问题的重大风险,但获得心理健康服务的机会较少。因此,农村老年人中的大多数心理健康问题仍未得到诊断或治疗。我们描述了爱荷华州和弗吉尼亚州针对农村老年人的两种心理健康外展项目模式,这些项目服务于地理和经济条件不同地区在人口统计学、文化和流行病学方面各异的人群。我们从项目启动、社区伙伴关系、目标人群、目标地区、涉及的临床学科、协调学科、转诊来源、运营模式、初始家庭评估、护理计划、可持续性、成本、患者人口统计学以及初次和二次诊断等方面对这些项目进行了比较。外展项目被认为是为地理上和/或社会上孤立的老年人群提供服务的有效模式。我们项目的经验虽然仅限于农村人口,但可能与任何试图为有心理健康问题或有心理健康问题风险的老年人提供服务的外展项目相关。