|
|||||
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
Lesson
45
LIFE
CYCLE TRANSITIONS AND ADULT
DEVELOPMENT
In
gerontology, the multidisciplinary study
of aging, it is common to distinguish among the
young-old,
the
old-old, and the oldest-old.
1-
Young-old 65-74
2-
The old-old 74-84
and
3-
The oldest-old 85-and up
Gero-psychology
focuses
on the mental health problems of later
adulthood. Gero-psychologists
focus
on
exploring and assessing
mental health problems of later adulthood
as compared to young people.
One
out of every four people getting
psychotherapy does not
have a
mental disorder. The
well-
functioning
people seeking treatment due to their
psychological
pain, difficult
but normal emotions
(for
example,
feeling "hurt") that can
result from difficult life
events.
DSM-IV-TR
tries to categorize these
sorts of issues that bring
mentally healthy clients into
therapy.
1-
One
possible diagnosis is adjustment
disorder, the development of
clinically significant symptoms in
response
to stress (that are
not
severe
enough to classify as mental
disorder).
2-
DSM-IV-TR
also includes a list of
other
conditions that may be a focus of
clinical attention, such
as a "partner
relational
problem," "bereavement," and "phase of
life problem."
3-
Psychologists
have learned much about
adult
development, the
occurrence of fairly predictable
challenges
in relationships, work, life
goals, and personal identity
during adult life. Several
theorists
divide
adult development into three
periods--early, middle, and later
life.
·
Consistent
with this division are the
three major life-cycle transitions, struggle in the
process of
moving
from one stage of adult
development into a new
one.
·
The
transition
to adult life is a time
for grappling with the major issues
related to identity, career,
and
relationships.
·
Family
transitions in the
middle years may include very happy
events, like the birth of the
first child,
or
very unhappy ones, like a difficult
divorce.
·
The
transition
to later life may
involve major changes in life
roles (e.g., retirement), grief
over the
death
of loved ones, and more
abstract issues that
accompany the inevitability of aging
and
mortality.
·
Life-cycle
transitions not only may
cause otherwise well-functioning
adults to seek
professional
help,
but also pose special
challenges to those already suffering
from a mental disorder.
·
Life-cycle
transitions differ greatly, and different
people respond to the same event in
different
ways.
·
The
psychologist Erik Erikson
highlighted conflict
as a
common theme.
·
By
definition, transitions involve change,
and conflict is a frequent
consequence of change.
1-
Erik Erikson highlighted
that development does not
end with childhood but
continues throughout
adult
life.
·
His
theory of psychosocial development
includes four stages of
adult development:
(1)
Identity versus role
confusion,
(2)
Intimacy versus self-absorption,
(3)
Generativity versus stagnation,
and
(4)
Integrity versus
despair.
·
Erikson
focused on the psychological side of
psychosocial development, whereas
many
contemporary
approaches emphasize social
relationships.
223
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
2-
Psychologist
Daniel
Levinson emphasizes
three major (and many minor)
transitions or "seasons" in
adult
life.
·
The
early
adult transition involves
moving away from family
and assuming adult
roles.
·
The
midlife
transition--often
called a "midlife crisis"--is a time
for becoming less driven
and
developing
more compassion.
·
The
late
adult transition is
characterized by the changing roles
and relationships of later life.
·
Still,
the outlines offered by Erikson and
Levinson capture broad commonalities in
the experiences
of
many great people.
·
Most
of us create social clocks--age-related
goals for ourselves--and we evaluate
our achievements
to
the extent that we are "on
time" or "off time."
·
Erikson
focused on the identity
crisis as the
central psychological conflict
during the transition to
adult
life.
·
Identity
conflicts are epitomized by the searching question
"Who am I?"
·
Other
things also change during the
transition to adulthood.
·
Young
adults must make decisions
about whether and where to go to
college and what career
paths
to
pursue.
3-
The
theory of the ego psychologist
Karen
Horney,
claim that people have competing
needs to move
toward,
to move away from, and to
move against others.
·
Moving
toward others
fulfills needs for love
and acceptance.
·
Moving
away from
others is a way of establishing
independence and efficacy.
·
Moving
against others
meets the individual's need
for power and
dominance.
·
According
to Horney, relationship difficulties come
from conflicts among these
three basic needs.
Aging
·
Typically,
adults become increasingly
aware of aging in their
forties and fifties.
·
Concerns
about physical health increase
for both men and
women in their sixties,
seventies, and
eighties.
·
Death
is an inevitability that confronts
all of us.
·
With
advancing age, we must face
both the abstraction of our
own mortality and our
specific fears
about
a painful and prolonged
death.
·
Bereavement
is a part of life for older
adults, as friends fall ill
and die.
·
Older
adults often confront a form
of social prejudice known as ageism, a term
that encompasses
a
number of misconceptions and prejudices
about aging.
·
Older
adults experience the full
range of human interests and
concerns, and we must guard
against
forming
stereotypes based on our
prejudices or fears about
aging.
·
Physical
functioning and health decline
with age, but the loss of
health and vigor is not
nearly as
rapid
as stereotypes suggest.
·
The
functioning of all sensory
systems declines gradually
throughout adult
life.
·
The
amount of muscle in our bodies
also declines with age,
but, like sensory function,
the loss is
gradual
until advanced age.
·
The
fact that aging is accompanied by
gradual declines in physical health
does not
mean
that older
adults
experience similar declines in
psychological well-being.
·
In
fact, older adults report
more positive relationships and a
greater sense of mastery
over their
environment
than do adults who are young
or in midlife.
·
On the
other hand, older adults do
report less of a sense of
purpose in life and less
satisfaction with
personal
growth in comparison to younger
adults.
·
Older
adults also report greater
satisfaction with their jobs
than younger people, but this may be
a
result
of self-selection.
·
According
to Erik Erikson many older
adults do wonder about the meaning of
their lives when
they
look back from the
perspective of their later
years.
224
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
·
The
presence of a supportive close
relationship is an important predictor of
psychological well-
being
during adult life.
·
Family
relationships are of key importance to
psychological well-being throughout the
life span.
·
Grief
is the emotional and social
process of coping with a separation or a
loss.
·
Bereavement
is a specific form of grieving in
response to the death of a loved
one for example,
when
the loss of a mate occurs
early in adult life or when a
child dies before a
parent.
·
Psychological
disorders are an important
concern among older adults;
this is especially true of
depression,
which may be more profound,
lasting, and debilitating
among older than
younger
adults.
·
Classification
of adults in later life typically divides
categories based on age and
health status.
·
In
gerontology, the multidisciplinary study
of aging, it is common to distinguish among the
young-
old,
the old-old, and the oldest-old.
·
The
young-old
are
adults roughly between the
ages of 65 and 75.
·
However,
the category is defined less by
age than by health and
vigor.
·
The
old-old
are
adults between the ages of approximately
75 and 85 who suffer from major
physical,
psychological,
or social (largely economic)
problems.
·
They
require some routine assistance in
living, although only about 6
percent of Americans in this
age
group live in a nursing
home.
·
The
oldest-old
are
the adults 85 years old or
older.
·
People
in this category are a diverse
group and include some
adults who maintain their
vigor and
others
in need of constant
assistance.
·
Widowed
women and low-income groups
are found disproportionately
among the oldest-old.
Twenty-two
percent of the oldest-old live in nursing
homes.
Psychological
Stresses for Older
People
1-
Grief is the emotional and
social process of coping with a
separation or a loss.
·
Bereavement
is a specific form of grieving in
response to the death of a loved
one for example,
when
the loss of a mate occurs
early in adult life or when a
child dies before a
parent.
2-
Some old people lose a sense
of meaning and purpose after retirement
or chronic illness.
3-
Depression is the most common mental
problems of older people; the
prevalence is higher among
women
than men.
4-
Elderly people suffer from generalized
anxiety disorder, phobias and panic
disorders.
5-
Minor lapses in memory or intellectual
functioning increases as one
gets older, the frequency
of
Dementias,
Alzheimer, Parkinson, Huntington's
chorea and Pick's
increases.
6-
The abuse of street drugs or
the abuse of prescription of drugs is commonly
alarming.
7-
Some people also show alcohol
related problems.
8-
Elderly also exhibit
psychotic disorders such as
schizophrenia or paranoid disorder.
Treatment
of Psychological Problems in Later Life
1-
Good
medical care is of great importance to
older adults, not only
for treating disease but
also for
promoting
physical health and psychological
well-being.
·
Because
health behavior is critical to the quality of
life among older adults,
experts view health
psychology
and behavioral medicine as central
components of medical
care.
2-
In
fact, a new sub-discipline of
these fields, called behavioral
gerontology, has been
developed
specifically
for studying and treating the behavioral
components of health and illness
among older
adults.
·
The
same psychological and
biological therapies used to treat
emotional disorders among
younger
adults
can be used to treat these
problems among the
aged.
·
However,
older adults may have
misconceptions about
psychotherapy.
225
Abnormal
Psychology PSY404
VU
3-
Health
care professionals must
focus not only on improving
quality of life among older
adults, but
on
maintaining integrity in death.
·
Health
behavior is particularly
important to the physical and
psychological well-being of older
adults.
4-
In
addition to appropriate health behavior,
important psychological contributions to
adjustment in
later
life include the availability of close
relationships and the experience of
loss.
5-
Numerous
social factors are linked
with a happier transition to later life,
especially material
well-
being
and participation in recreational
activities.
6-
Religion
is also very important to many
older adults, and religious
affiliations have been found
to
moderate
the ill effects of bereavement,
particularly among men.
7-
Other
research indicates that
integration into the community is a major
contribution to adjustment to
later
life.
226
Table of Contents:
|
|||||