Cynthia Lien, Tony Rosen, Elizabeth M. Bloemen, Robert C. Abrams, Maria Pavlou, Mark S. Lachs
Objectives To identify patterns of personal experience or behavior in self-neglect by exploring narratives of cognitively intact older adults.
Design Descriptive study involving semistructured interviews and unstructured narratives.
Setting A parent study of self-neglect characteristics.
Participants Cognitively intact, self-neglecting older adults referred from 11 community-based senior services agencies (N = 69).
Measurements Interviews included a comprehensive psychiatric assessment using the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Axis-I and II Disorders and an unstructured interview that allowed subjects to describe important elements of their life stories. Content analysis was used to identify personal experiences and behavior patterns in each subject's narrative.
Results Four types of traumatic personal experiences (psychologically traumatic loss, separation or abandonment (29%); violent victimization, physical trauma, or sexual abuse (19%); exposure to war or political violence (9%); prolonged mourning (7%)) and five behavior patterns (significant financial instability (23%), severe lifelong mental illness (16%), mistrust of people or paranoia (13%), distrust and avoidance of the medical establishment (13%), substance abuse or dependence (13%)) were identified in the life stories.
Conclusion Patterns of traumatic personal experiences and maladaptive behaviors that self-neglecters frequently report were identified. Experiences, perceptions, and behaviors developed over a lifetime may contribute to elder self-neglect. Further exploration and better understanding of these patterns may identify potential risk factors and areas for future targeted screening, intervention, and prevention.
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