Geriatric Psychiatry

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Geriatric

Dr. Ravi Soni


DM Geriatric Psychiatry
Psychiatry
Consultant Geriatric Psychiatrist
GIPS Psychiatry and De-addiction Clinic
Introduction
Dr. Ravi Soni
DM Geriatric Psychiatry
Consultant Geriatric Psychiatrist
GIPS Psychiatry Clinic
[Memory clinic and Geriatric Psychiatry Clinic]
Mobile No: 7379076870, 9601555370

Achievements:
Area of Work: o MD Psychiatry from BJMC Ahmedabad
o Elderly Psychiatric Illnesses including o DM Geriatric Psychiatry From KGMC, Lucknow
Depression, Psychosis, bipolar disorder, o First and Only Geriatric Psychiatrist of Gujarat
Anxiety disorder etc. o Faculty and Speaker in Various national and regional
conferences
o Management of all types of Dementia
o Conducted many workshops for “Awareness about
o Expert in Management of Delirium Geriatric Psychiatric illnesses and Dementia”
o Counselling and Psychotherapy o Published 4 articles in national and International
Journals
What is on the plate today?

 Why this specialty is needed?


 Aging and Disease?
 Life events in Elderly
 Fears of Elderly
 Triple Ds of elderly
 Late life Depression
 Delirium
 Dementia- Ultra Brief
Why this Specialty required?

 Psychiatric illnesses may have different


manifestations, pathogenesis, and
pathophysiology from younger adults
 Coexisting chronic medical illness
 More medicines-Interactions
 Cognitive impairment
 Effects of aging physiology on drug therapy
 Increased risk for social stressors, including
retirement and widowhood
Ageing: Demographic Scenario
Advancing Age : Birth of Elderly
o Steady rise in the o Consequently increasing life expectancy
population of elderly Males Females
1951 32.45 31.66
globally
2001 62.80 63.80
o In India - increasing 2011 68.90 69.50
longevity o Census 2011 population:
o Improvement in Health o India- 1220 m; Elderly - 92 m
Care Services o Gujarat- 61 m Elderly- 5.25 m
Ageing
Ageing is a progressive
deterioration of physiological
function, an intrinsic age-
related process of loss of
viability and increase in
vulnerability.
(Magalhaes JP de, Integrative Genomics of
Ageing group, 2001, 2004, 2005, 2008)
Ageing and Diseases
Diseases due to the Ageing Process
 The “biological age” of a person is not identical with his “chronological age”.
 Years may wrinkle the skin, but worry, doubt, fear, anxiety, tension, and self-distrust
wrinkle the soul.
 With the passage of time, certain changes take place in an organism.
 The following disabilities are considered as incident to it:
o Senile cataract
o Glaucoma
o Nerve deafness
o Osteoporosis affecting mobility
o Failure of special senses
o Bronchitis
o Alzheimer’s disease
o Rheumatism
o Dental problems
Ageing and Diseases (contd.)
Major Mental Health Disorders
 Impaired memory, rigid outlook and resistance
to change are some of the mental changes in
the elderly.
 Major mental health problems of older adults
are:
 Organic Disorders
 Late Life Functional Diseases:
 Mood (Affective) Disorders
 Neurotic, Stress Related and Somatoform Disorders
 Schizophrenia, Schizotypal and Delusional
Disorders (Functional Psychoses)
 Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders
 Suicidal Behaviors in the Elderly
 Loneliness
Dimensions of Healthy Ageing
Indicators Healthy Ageing

 No physical disability over the age of 75 as rated


by a physician;
 Good subjective health assessment (i.e. good
self-ratings of one's health);
 Length of un-disabled life;
 Good mental health;
 Objective social support;
 Self-rated life satisfaction in different domains;
Marriage; income-related work; children;
friendship and social contacts; hobbies;
community service activities; religion and
recreation/sports.
Some useful Suggestions for
Healthy Ageing
o Eat a balanced diet, including fruits and
vegetables daily.
o Maintain sleep-wake cycle.
o Exercise regularly (check with a doctor before
starting an exercise program).
o Do meditation.
o Get regular health check-ups.
o Quit smoking (it's never too late to quit).
o Practice safety habits at home to prevent falls
and fractures.
o Always wear your seatbelt in a car.
o Stay in contact with family and friends.
Some useful Suggestions for
Healthy Ageing

Stay active through work, play, and


community.
Active sexual life.
Avoid overexposure to the sun and the cold.
If you drink, moderation is the key.
When you drink, let someone else drive.
Keep personal and financial records in order
to simplify budgeting and investing.
Plan long-term housing and money needs.
Keep a positive attitude towards life.
Do things that make you happy.
Aging and the Life Cycle (Erickson)
 Young adulthood--intimacy versus
isolation
 Middle-aged--generativity versus self-
absorption
 Elderly--Integrity versus despair
(Acceptance of mortality,
satisfaction with one’s meaning in
the world)

 Fear of death is usually a mid-life


issue
Concerns/Life Events of Elderly

 Retirement Lowered Self Esteem


 Economic Insecurity Loss of Control
 Decreasing Health Abuse/Neglect and Isolation
 Dependency Loss and Loneliness
 Chronic illnesses So many Medications
 Lack of caregiver Boredom

 Reminiscence is normative
 On-time normative incidents do not usually result in crisis
Fears of elderly

 Pain

 Disability

 Abandonment

 Dependency
Elder Abuse
and Neglect
Elder Abuse
and Neglect
Triple Ds in Elderly
(Most Common in Elderly)

Depression
Dementia
Delirium
Other Psychiatric disorders of
old age

 Psychosis
 Anxiety-Phobias
 Alcohol use.

 High risk of suicide


Risk factors include
 Loss of social roles
 Loss of autonomy
 Deaths
 Declining health
 Increased isolation
 Financial constraints
 Decreased cognitive functioning
Common but
Late life Depression Different
presentation

 Persistent depression in older adults ---- enormous individual and


family burden.

 Increases mortality both from suicide and concurrent medical


illness.

 Under-recognized in primary care settings, general hospitals and


nursing homes.

 Different presentation---- Happily sad, suffering with


smile
Late life Depression

Late onset
Depression- First time
Psychotic
after age 50 Depression

Post Stroke Vascular


Depression Depression
Phenomenology

 “Depression without sadness”

 Lack of feeling or emotion

 Prominent cognitive complaints

 Prominent somatic complaints (eg:


preoccupation with bowel function)
Phenomenology (contd..)
 Unexplained health worries,
unknown fear

 Heightened pain
experience/complaints

 Multiple Physician/Hospital visits


without resolution of the problem

 Irritability
Phenomenology (contd..)

 Problems in initiative, self care, household maintenance,


transportation and communication.

 Social withdrawal, avoidance of social interaction

 Prominent loss of interest and pleasure in activities

 Signs of functional impairment or otherwise unexplained


functional decline
Epidemiology
Confused
 Classical major depression is less Clinician
frequent in older adults (prevalence
of 1%)

 15 to 25 % experience depressive
symptoms that do not meet criteria
for a specific depressive syndrome
but cause distress and significant
dysfunctioning.
Theories behind low prevalence of
major depression in elderly

 “Resilience” – capacity to adjust and


recover from stressors without loss of
equanimity.

 Shared experience or “generational


temperament” give rise to variation in
prevalence across generations

 Flaws in the diagnostic approaches and


interview techniques.
Risk factors

 Medical illness- parkinson’s disease,


stroke, Alzheimer’s disease,
hypothyroidism, malignancies.

 Past history, spousal death, separation,


lack of social contact, death of loved
ones and bereavement.

 Staying in nursing homes, cognitive


decline, pain problems, under-
nutrition.
Suicide

 Rates are high

 First episode of major depression which was


not diagnosed or untreated

 Psychotic depression, alcohol, recent loss or


bereavement, loss of spouse, abuse of
sedatives and hypnotics.
Major depression in elderly

 Same criteria as for young population

 Disturbances in sleep, appetite and sexual


functioning are not always reliable indicator.

 Use of HAM-D, MMSE and GDS are useful in elderly


in primary care settings for screening.
Age of onset : early vs late

 Early onset depression :


childhood, adolescence
or earlier adulthood.

 Late onset depression is


with first onset in the
second half of life at age
of 50.
Contd...

 Early onset depression have more first degree


relatives with depression (genetic loading)

 Late onset depression have


 More chronic physical illness,
 Less complete response to treatment, and
 Chronic course,
 Poorer prognosis,
 Increased mortality and
 Frontal and temporal atrophy on scans.
Depression with reversible dementia

 Depression in elderly is associated with cognitive


impairments

 “Pseudodementia of depression” or “depression with


reversible dementia” is now considered obsolete.

 Brain dysfunction is “unmasked” by depression or its


just beginning of dementing process
Vascular depression

 Cerebrovascular diseases both cortical and sub


cortical (chronic microvascular).

 Frontostriatal disconnection : executive


dysfunction, reduced interest in activities,
psychomotor retardation, cognitive impairment
and impaired insight.

 Impairment in instrumental activities of daily


living and poor prognosis.
Post stroke depression

 Depression developing a year or more after a


stroke is strongly influenced by impairment in
social and physical functioning.

 Depression after a 3 to 6 months period of stroke


have more vegetative features and larger lesion
volumes.
Depression with psychosis

 Respond not at all to placebos, poorly to


antidepressants used alone, and more
often to combinations of antidepressant
and antipsychotic medications

 Hospitalization is typically indicated and


electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is the
treatment of first choice when agitation,
starvation, dehydration, or suicidality
threaten survival.
Depression with psychosis

 Delusions in psychotic depression involve guilt, jealousy,


paranoia, or somatic symptoms (e.g., beliefs in suffering a
serious or a fatal medical illness).

 Patients frequently complain bitterly of somatic symptoms


without medical explanation, and can express profound
nihilistic beliefs and hopelessness, but hallucinations are
relatively infrequent.

 Some patients are unable to urinate or defecate and require


urgent, separate intervention for these problems.
Post-bereavement and depression

 Many elderly people experience a great deal of


loss, not only in the form of death (e.g., spouse,
friends, relatives, loved pets), but also in other
spheres of life such as loss of
 Physical ability,
 Financial income,
 Social status,
 Mobility,
 Life ambitions, and
 Independence
Symptoms favoring major
depression
 Guilt about things other than actions taken
or not taken by the survivor around the time
of the death

 Thoughts of death other than the survivor


feeling that he or she would be better off
dead or should have died with the deceased
person

 Morbid preoccupation with worthlessness


contd...

 Marked psychomotor retardation

 Prolonged and marked functional impairment

 Hallucinatory experiences other than thinking


that he or she hears the voice or footsteps, or
transiently sees the image, of the deceased
person
Chronic medical illness

 Increased medical burden increases


depressive symptoms, and long-term
depressive symptoms increase medical
burden and mortality

 Depression lowers self-rated health and


intensifies physical symptoms including
amplifying the perception of pain, and
chronic pain worsens depression.
Cerebral abnormalities

 Structural brain abnormalities are more frequent in


patients with LOD than EOD.

 Depression is especially common with higher grades of


WMHs in the frontal lobes, even after controlling for
vascular risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes,
and ischemic heart disease
Pharmacotherapy
 SSRI - drug of choice.
 Common adverse effects are GI
distrtess, agitation, akathisia,
insomnia, sexual dysfunction and
occasionally parkinson like motor
side effects
 Risk of serotonin syndrome
Hyponatremia – inappropriate ADH,
urinary retention
 TCA- anticholinergic side effects

 Nortriptyline and desipramine have less SE.

 TCA better for chronic pain management


 Venlafaxine,desvenlafaxine, mirtazapine,
bupropion, duloxetine and MAOIs can be used as
only agents or as part of augmentation.

 Psychostimulants,
such as methylphenidate and
amphetamine have inconclusive evidence for
efficacy.
Psychotherapy
 Evidence is insufficient to recommend
psychotherapy as a first-line treatment
for depression in older adults, but
clinical judgment is the preferred
decision tool in individual cases.

 Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and


problem-solving therapy (PST), and
antide-pressant medication combined
with interpersonal therapy (IPT) has
role.
 A few studies document the promise of various
forms of psychotherapy (CBT, PST, IPT, , and
dialectical behavior therapy [DBT] group skills’
training) in geriatric depression in outpatients.

 Various obstacles to use psychotherapy in elderly.


Treatment resistance

 Delayed onset of therapeutic activity


because of need to “start low and go
slow”

 Lack of full remission frequently


experienced by depressed elderly, even
after having an adequate medication
trial.
Treatment resistance

 Combining drugs
 Lithium
 Thyroid hormones
 Beta blockers –pindolol
 Atypical antipsychotics
 Psychostimulants
 D3 agonists as pramipexole
Treatment resistance (contd..)

 Although approximately 50% to 60% of elderly


patients improve clinically with
antidepressant therapy

 The efficacy of these agents may be lower


mainly in those with vascular or
neurodegenerative brain disease.
ECT

 ECT is the most important of the non-


pharmacological somatic treatments

 It is the treatment of choice in certain older


patients with severe depression due to poor
tolerance of psychotropic medications, psychotic
features, significant comorbid medical conditions,
or marked disability or urgent risk to life.
COURSE AND PROGNOSIS

 Left
untreated, late-life major depression
tends to remit spontaneously after 12–48
months, but patients with first-episode
depression with onset after age 60 have a
70% chance of recurrence within 2 years.
COURSE AND PROGNOSIS

 Data from naturalistic studies have identified several


predictors of relapse and recurrence:
 Frequent prior episodes,
 High pretreatment severity of depression and anxiety,
 Supervening medical illness,
 History of myocardial infarction or vascular disease,
and
 Cognitive impairment.
Delirium
 Usually acute and fluctuating

 Altered state of consciousness (reduced


awareness of and ability to respond to the
environment)

 Cognitive deficits in attention,


concentration, thinking, memory, and
goal-directed behavior are almost always
present
Prevalence of Delirium
 ICU: up to 70%
 Roughly 83% patients near death
That is what delirium is …..

Agitation Confusion Sedation Compulsive


Searching

OR
Combination
Distractions Hallucinations
Features of delirium
 May be accompanied by
 Inattention
 Hallucinations,
 Illusions,
 Emotional lability,
 Alterations in the sleep-wake cycle,
 Evening worsening of symptoms
 Fluctuations in Symptoms
 Psychomotor slowing or hyperactivity,
 Searching and picking behavior
 Removing clothes, life support equipments (like IV line, Catheter, Nasogastric
tube, Ventilator support)
 Usually abrupt and resolution is also rapid when underlying cause
is corrected.
Types of delirium

Types:
 Hyperactive , hyperalert
delirium: almost always consultation

 Hypoactive, hypoalert delirium: no


consultation

 Mixed:
Fluctuation between
hyperactive and hypoactive
Causes of Delirium: I WATCH DEATH

 Infectious Deficiencies
 Withdrawal Endocrinopathies
 Acute metabolic Acute vascular
 Trauma Toxins/drugs
 CNS Pathology Heavy Metals
 Hypoxia

 Note that prescribed medicines may


cause delirium
The Mortality of Delirium

 The mortality outcome at 6 months post


discharge for delirious patients not identified
was three times higher than the delirious
patients who were identified and treated.

 25 percent of delirious postoperative patient


had a lethal outcome; control population 13%
Burden of Delirium
 Increased mortality

 Increased nursing care

 Increased length of stay

 Increased risk of cognitive decline

 Increased risk of functional decline


Treatment of delirium

 Look for underlying cause “always be


suspicious”

 Close supervision, especially by family

 Reorient frequently

 Adequate lighting
Treatment of delirium (continued)

 Use consistent personnel

 Try not to use restraints, as it can worsen confusion.

 Medication only if behavioral attempts fail


 Avoid polypharmacy
 Low dose neuroleptic is treatment of choice, unless the
delirium is due to withdrawal.
 If due to Alcohol withdrawal, use a short-acting
benzodiazepine. (Lorazepam)
Treatment

For excessive agitation

Dose Route Reps

Haloperidol 0.25 -1 mg POIM bid/tid Every 30-60 min

Risperidone 0.25 - 0.5 mg PO bid/tid Every 30-60 min

Olanzapine 2.5 – 5 mg PO/IM Every 30-60 min

Quetiapine 25 – 50 mg PO Every 30-60 min


What is dementia?

 Dementia is a syndrome due to disease of the brain, usually


of a chronic or progressive nature.

 There is disturbance of multiple higher cortical functions,


including memory, thinking, orientation, comprehension,
calculation, learning capacity, language, and judgement.

 Dementia produces an appreciable decline in intellectual


functioning, and usually some interference with personal
activities of daily living, such as washing, dressing, eating,
personal hygiene, excretory and toilet activities.
Epidemiology
 AD is the most common cause of dementia amongst
people aged 65 and older
 Prevalence among people over 60 years–5% to 8 %
 Starting with 0.5% prevalence at 55 yrs., it goes on
doubling every five years (60yrs-1%; 65yrs. – 2%; 70 yrs. -
4%; 75yrs.-8% and so on)
 Risk at the age of 80 years is around 15 to 20%
 At present nearly 35.6 million people worldwide with
dementia. Expected to double by 2030 and triple by 2050.
 About 7.7 million new cases of dementia each year.
 A new case detected in every 4 seconds somewhere in
world. (WHO)
Common Types of Dementias

Type of Dementia % in total Cases

Alzheimer’s Dementia 50-55

Vascular Dementia 30-35

Lewy body Dementia 5-7

Pick’s Dementia 3-5

Other Dementias 10-15


Risk Factors for Dementia

 Age: 60-70 years • Cholesterol problems


• Atrial fibrillation
 Gender: female
• Smoking
 Prior stroke • Low Education
 Atherosclerosis • Family history
 Heart disease
 High blood pressure
 Diabetes
 Diet
Etiological classification of dementia

 Neurodegenerative Diseases
 Alzheimer’s disease
 Parkinson’s disease
 Diffuse Lewy body disease
 Progressive supra-nuclear palsy
 Multisystem atrophy
 Huntington’s disease
 Frontotemporal dementias – e.g. Pick’s disease
Etiological classification of dementia

 Structural Disease or Trauma


 Normal pressure hydrocephalus
 Neoplasms
 Dementia pugilistica
 Vascular Disease
 Vascular dementia
 Vasculitis
 Heredo-metabolic Disease
 Wilson’s disease
 Other late-onset lysosomal storage diseases
Etiological classification of dementia

 Demyelinating or Demyelinating Disease


 Multiple sclerosis
 Infectious Disease
 Human immunodeficiency virus, type 1
 Tertiary syphilis
 Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
 Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
 Whipple’s disease
 Chronic meningitis – e.g. Cryptococcal
Etiological classification of dementia

 Nutritional deficiency:
 Vitamin B12 deficiency, Folate deficiency, thiamine
deficiency.
 Organ failure:
 Uremic and hepatic encephalopathy
 Endocrine disease:
 Diabetesmellitus, hyper/ hypothyroidism, Cushing's
syndrome etc.
Irreversible / Reversible dementias

D = Drugs, Delirium
• Alzheimer’s Dementia
E = Emotions (depression) &
• Lewy Body Dementia
Endocrine Disease
• Pick’s Disease
(Frontotemporal M=Metabolic Disturbances
Dementia) E = Eye & Ear Impairments
• Parkinson’s N =Nutritional Disorders
• Heady Injury T =Tumors, Toxicity, Trauma to
• Huntington’s Disease Head
• Creutzfeldt- Jacob I = Infectious Disorders
Disease A= Alcohol, Arteriosclerosis
Early symptoms
o ભ ૂલી જવ ું
o નાવા-ધોવામાું વધ સમય લેવો
o એકની એક વાત વારું વાર કરવી
o પોતાની કાળજી ના રાખી શકવી
o ઘરના વ્યક્તતના નામ ભ ૂલી જવા o રસ્તા ભ ૂલી જવા
o જૂની વાતો યાદ કરવી o પેશાબ ગમે તયાું કરી દે વો
o રાતભર ભટક્યા કરવ ું
o શક-શુંકા કરવી o અચાનક હસવા-રડવા લાગવ ું
o કોઈ ચોરી કરી ગય ું એવી વાતો o ગમસમ બેસી રહેવ ું
કરવી
o ખાવાન ું ખાઈને વારું વાર ભ ૂલી
જવ ું
Lab and other tests for dementia

 Complete Blood Count, ESR


 Serum Urea, Creatinine, Electrolytes
 Thyroid function tests
 Serum B 12 & Folate
 Electrocardiogram
 Chest X-ray
 CT Scan of head/ MRI head
 Lumber Puncture (if suspicion of infectious etiology)
 Tests for syphilis, HIV
 Drug screen if appropriate
 Brain biopsy (for confirmatory diagnosis)
Neuroimaging

 Diffuse brain atrophy


 Enlargement of ventricles
 Widening of sulci and gyri
 Atrophy more prominent in hippocampus
 There can also be evidences of strokes,
lacunar infarcts, and white matter hyper
intensities. These complicate the picture.
Alzheimer’s Disease Vs Vascular Dementia
Characteristics Alzheimer’s Disease Vascular Dementia
Sex Women Men
Age Generally over age 75 years Generally over age 60 years
Onset & progression Gradually progressive Stuttering or episodic, with
stepwise deterioration
History of hypertension Less common Common
History of Less common Common
stroke(s),transient
ischemic attack(s),or
other focal neurological
symptoms
Hypertension Less common Common
Focal neurological signs Uncommon Common
Emotional lability Less common More common
Cognitive deficits Uniform patchy
a
Activities of daily BPSD Cognitive
living deficits

Behavioural and Psychological Symptoms


of Dementia:
A heterogeneous range of psychological
reactions, psychiatric symptoms and
behaviours resulting from the presence of
dementia
Behavioral and psychological
symptoms of dementia (BPSD)
 Dementia is associate with progressive cognitive disability, a
high prevalence of Behavior and Psychological symptoms of
Dementia (BPSD) such as agitation, depression and psychosis.
 BPSD are an integral part of the disease process and present
severe problems to patients, their families and caregivers and
society at large.
 It increases stress in caregivers.

 BPSD are treatable and generally respond better to therapy


than other symptoms of dementia.
Why is BPSD important?

They result in:


 Excess disability
 Increased hospitalization
 Premature institutionalization
 Suffering for patient and caregiver
 Substantial increase in financial costs
 Associated with greater functional impairment
 Elder abuse
 Associated with increased mortality
BPSD
 Seen in:
≈40% of mild cognitive impairment
≈ 60% of patients in early stage of dementia
 Affects
90-100% of patients with dementia at
some point in the course of their illness
(Mega et al. 1996).
 Gets
more frequent and troublesome with
advancing dementia
BPSD- behavioural symptoms
Most common Common Less common

•Apathy •Agitation •Crying


•Aggression •Disinhibition •Mannerisms
•Wandering •Pacing
•Restlessness •Screaming
•Eating •Sundowning
problems
BPSD- psychological symptoms

Most common Common Less common

•Depression •Delusions •Misidentification


•Anxiety •Hallucinations
•Insomnia
BPSD
Alzheimer’s Vascular Lewy body Fronto-
temporal

Apathy Apathy Hallucinations Apathy


Agitation Depression Delusions Disinhibition
Depression Delusions Depression Elation
Anxiety Emotional Sleep Obsessions
incontinence disturbance
Irritability
Estimated frequency of common
BPSD
 Agitation up to 75%
 Wandering up to 60%
 Depression up to 50%
 Psychosis up to 30%
 Screaming up to 25%
 Aggression up to 20%
 Sexual Disinhibition up to 10%
(Mega, Cumming et al. 1996)
BPSD
 50 – 90% of caregivers considered physical
aggression as the most serious problem they
encountered and a factor leading to
institutionalization (Rabins et al. 1982)

Treatment of
Dementia
Very Lengthy Topic to cover: So not
covered
Integrity vs despair
 Integrity: the state of being
 Psychosocial whole and undivided
Conflict: Integrity
 Despair: the complete loss or
versus despair absence of hope
 Major Question: "Did I  This stage occurs during late
live a meaningful life?“ adulthood from age 65 through
the end of life.
 Basic Virtue: Wisdom  During this period of time,
 Important people reflect back on the life
they have lived and come away
Event(s): Reflecting with either a sense of
back on life fulfillment from a life well
lived or a sense of regret and
despair over a life misspent.
THE END

“healthy children will


not fear life if their elders have
integrity enough not to fear
death.”
Introduction
Dr. Ravi Soni
DM Geriatric Psychiatry
Consultant Geriatric Psychiatrist
GIPS Psychiatry Clinic
[Memory clinic and Geriatric Psychiatry Clinic]
Mobile No: 7379076870, 9601555370

Achievements:
Area of Work: o MD Psychiatry from BJMC Ahmedabad
o Elderly Psychiatric Illnesses including o DM Geriatric Psychiatry From KGMC, Lucknow
Depression, Psychosis, bipolar disorder, o First and Only Geriatric Psychiatrist of Gujarat
Anxiety disorder etc. o Faculty and Speaker in Various national and regional
conferences
o Management of all types of Dementia
o Conducted many workshops for “Awareness about
o Expert in Management of Delirium Geriatric Psychiatric illnesses and Dementia”
o Counselling and Psychotherapy o Published 4 articles in national and International
Journals

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