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Comparison of Coping Strategies with Anxiety and Anxiety-depressive Disorders in Elderly and Senile Age
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2020
Abstract
Research of copingstrategies, during development of anxiety andanxiety-depressive disorders in elderly and senile age, is a prerequisite forunderstanding of their genesis and of differentiated psychosocial therapy.
Determinecoping strategies of the elderly and senile patients with anxiety andanxiety-depressive disorders.
Comparefrequency of use of different coping strategies in elderly and senile age, inthe group: with high anxiety level, with an average anxiety level, with low anxietylevel.
Thisis a cross-sectional study of 214 individuals with anxiety andanxiety-depressive disorders, without mental disorders (elderly (60-74 years) -113 (52.8%), senile (75-89 years) – 101 (47.2%)). Clinical-psychopathological methodand psychometric methods (Manifest Anxiety Scale, the questionnaire E. Heim about ways of coping) were used.
Significant(p <0.05) influence of the age factor was revealed with respect to usage of non-constructive cognitive coping strategy “humility” in the group with high anxiety level; behavioural constructive copingstrategy “recourse” in the group with low anxiety level; behavioural relativelyconstructivecoping strategy “distraction” in the groupwith an average anxiety level, behavioural non-constructive coping strategy “activeavoidance” in the group with high anxiety level.
Use of coping strategies with anxietyand anxiety-depressive disorders in elderly and senile age has its own peculiarities. It is implemented as a function of itslevel (cognitive, emotional., behavioural) and of the anxiety degree. Compensation insufficiencyof cognitive coping strategies in senile age is implemented at the expense ofintact behavioural skills of coping with anxiety states.
- Type
- Article: 0442
- Information
- European Psychiatry , Volume 30 , Issue S1: Abstracts of the 23rd European Congress of Psychiatry , March 2015 , pp. 1
- Copyright
- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2015
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