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Foreword
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- By Dan Blazer, MD, PhD, J. P. Gibbons Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA
- Carolyn A. Chew-Graham, University of Manchester, Robert Baldwin, Alistair Burns, University of Manchester
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- Book:
- Integrated Management of Depression in the Elderly
- Published online:
- 18 December 2009
- Print publication:
- 03 April 2008, pp xiii-xiv
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- Chapter
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Summary
To my knowledge there is nothing quite like this book in the English language, perhaps in any language. This is not to say late-life depression has not been the focus of previous books. Felix Post, in 1962, published the results from his clinical follow-up of late-life depression in what I believe was the first text for physicians on the symptoms and course of this common condition written in the twentieth century. I attempted a general overview of the topic twenty years later, summarizing the extant literature and coupling this review with my own experience in treating depressed older adults. The National Institutes of Mental Health in the United States convened a consensus panel a little over a decade later that lead to a detailed literature review and recommendations for clinical investigators, recommendations that have spawned a plethora of research reports over the past decade. There have been many other single-authored and edited textbooks since.
What makes this book different? Is this difference of use to practitioners? Unlike anything written to date, the editors have derived their primary data from the most important source for truly grasping the nature of late life depression and entering the complex task of designing and implementing a treatment plan. That source is the collection of practitioners ‘on the ground’ working with depressed older adults daily, beginning not with the psychiatrist or psychologist but with the primary care physician/general practitioner.