Introduction
I. Geriatric Neuropsychological Assessment
A. Assessment of Common Geriatric Conditions
1. An Integrated Model for Geriatric Neuropsychological Assessment,
Guy G. Potter and Deborah K. Attix
2. Normal Aging and Mild Cognitive Impairment, Glenn Smith and Beth
K. Rush
3. Neurodegenerative Dementias, Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer and Lauren
H. Warren
4. Stable and Slowly Progressive Dementias, M. Allison Cato and
Bruce A. Crosson
5. Potentially Reversible Cognitive Symptoms in Older Adults, Wes
S. Houston and Mark W. Bondi
B. Specific Considerations
6. Using Norms in Neuropsychological Assessment of the Elderly,
Robyn M. Busch, Gordon J. Chelune, and Yana Suchy
7. Functional Assessment, Daniel Marson and Katina R. Hebert
8. Cultural Issues, Jennifer J. Manly
9. Feedback, Joanne Green
II. Geriatric Neuropsychological Intervention
A. Cognitive Training and Compensatory Techniques
10. An Integrated Model for Geriatric Neuropsychological
Intervention, Deborah K. Attix
11. Training of Cognitive and Functionally Relevant Skills in Mild
Alzheimer's Disease: An Integrated Approach, David Loewenstein and
Amarilis Acevedo
12. Spaced Retrieval: A Model for Dissemination of a Cognitive
Intervention for Persons with Dementia, Cameron J. Camp
13. Multitechnique Program Approaches, Linda Clare
14. Language Interventions in Dementia, Cynthia K. Thompson and
Nancy Johnson
15. External Aids, Michelle S. Bourgeois
B. Psychotherapeutic Interventions
16. Behavioral Treatment of Affective Disorders and Associated
Symptoms, Rebecca G. Logsdon, Susan M. McCurry, and Linda Teri
17. Behavioral Treatment of Impaired Functioning and Behavioral
Symptoms, Ann Louise Barrick
18. Group Psychotherapy Approaches for Dementia, Guy G. Potter,
Deborah K. Attix, and Cory K. Chen
19. Pharmacological and Other Treatment Strategies for Alzheimer's
Disease, Kathleen Hayden and Mary Sano
Deborah K. Attix, PhD, completed her postdoctoral fellowship in
Clinical Neuropsychology at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation. She
joined the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
(Division of Medical Psychology) and Department of Medicine
(Division of Neurology) at Duke in 1995 and is now an Assistant
Clinical Professor there. Dr. Attix worked with the Joseph and
Kathleen Bryan Alzheimer's Disease Research Center and subsequently
organized and became the Medical Director of the Clinical
Neuropsychology Service at Duke University Medical Center. Her
clinical work focuses on geriatric neuropsychological assessment
and intervention. Dr. Attix is best known for her intervention work
involving cognitive training and compensation and for
psychotherapeutic techniques targeting memory, function, and mood
in dementia.
Kathleen A. Welsh-Bohmer, PhD, is a Professor within the Department
of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (Division of Medical
Psychology) at Duke University Medical Center and holds a joint
appointment in the Department of Medicine (Division of Neurology).
Dr. Welsh-Bohmer was recruited by Duke University Medical Center in
1987 to join the newly formed Joseph and Kathleen Bryan Alzheimer's
Disease Research Center, and she currently is the Director of that
center. Dr. Welsh-Bohmer is best known for her work in the clinical
detection of early-stage Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related
dementias and the relationship of these diseases to genetic and
environmental factors. She has been a leader in many multicenter
collaborative studies of AD and currently leads the nationally
known Cache County Memory Study, a population-based epidemiological
investigation of mild cognitive impairment and AD. Dr.
Welsh-Bohmer's clinical work focuses on neuropsychological
assessment in neurodegenerative disorders, including AD and related
dementias.
Superb! The editors and contributors are to be congratulated for
producing this benchmark text for advanced graduate students,
residents, and practitioners of geriatric neuropsychology. A unique
feature of the text is its synthesis of intervention with
assessment. Moreover, it provides detailed empirical support for
using cognitive training, compensatory techniques, and
psychotherapeutic interventions for improving mood, behavior, and
functional capacity, even in disorders where progression is
inexorable. Well written, thoroughly referenced, and up to date,
this book is a powerful antidote to the therapeutic nihilism that
often surrounds psychological work with dementia patients.--Jason
Brandt, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Every neuropsychologist, clinical psychologist, and psychiatrist
working with older people will want to beg, borrow, or buy a copy
of this most impressive book. It is not only comprehensive but also
original in its coverage of the issues faced by people with
dementia and other conditions affecting the older population. The
section on assessment is thorough and links theory and practice
very well, and the coverage of therapy and treatment issues is
especially strong. An important contribution to the
neuropsychological literature, this practical resource is almost
certain to become a classic.--Barbara A. Wilson, PhD, Medical
Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge,
UK
This book presents cutting-edge research and theory on the many
diagnostic and therapeutic issues that confront clinical
neuropsychologists and other health service providers who care for
the steadily increasing number of elderly patients in every
nation's health care system. The editors have integrated
contributions from leading researchers and clinicians into a
single, coherent, and valuable resource.--Robert J. Ivnik, PhD,
Department of Psychology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine,
Rochester, Minnesota
- Unusual in encompassing not only clinical neuropsychological
assessment but also intervention. This volume seems destined to
become a major clinical reference book, useful for doctoral and
postdoctoral students, practitioners, and researchers....The
editors have done a commendable job in creating a unified volume
that is nicely introduced by an integrate model of assessment in
Chapter 1 and an integrated model of intervention in Chapter 10.
--The Gerontologist, 12/2/2005ƒƒ The volume succeeds in every way,
as a major advance and as an essential resource for the clinical
neuropsychologist interested in this realm of practice....There is
not a bad chapter in the book. Every topic takes readers somewhere
better than they were before they cracked the spine....This is a
book project that has been entirely successful. It needs to be on
the neuropsychologist's shelf and available to students....This
book is great by any standard. --PsycCRITIQUES, 12/2/2005ƒƒ Those
who decide to obtain this book will be very happy with their
purchase. The book is comprehensive and well organized, which makes
it an ideal selection as a resource to place on one's bookshelf. It
is up-to-date and differs from similar books by providing a
uniquely neuropsychological point-of-view about neurodegenerative
disorders and related syndromes rather than simply rehashing
methods for conducting a differential diagnosis. The book's
viewpoint is helpful for the situation commonly encountered in most
current clinical settings, when a multidisciplinary team makes the
diagnosis and the neuropsychologist is asked to provide a
functional assessment of the patient as well as an appropriate
intervention. The sections on intervention are provided in a
particularly useful and digestible format. The outline and
theoretical rationale for neuropsychological intervention in
geriatric patients is presented in an accessible manner, more
useful than what is typically found in most sources on cognitive
rehabilitation, including those books addressing traumatic brain
injury intervention strategies. Whether a veteran or a recent
entrant into the field, neuropsychologists from all backgrounds and
specialties will benefit from this book's well-presented
introduction to contemporary practice in geriatric neuropsychology.
--Journal of International Neuropsychological Society,
12/2/2005
Superb! The editors and contributors are to be congratulated for
producing this benchmark text for advanced graduate students,
residents, and practitioners of geriatric neuropsychology. A unique
feature of the text is its synthesis of intervention with
assessment. Moreover, it provides detailed empirical support for
using cognitive training, compensatory techniques, and
psychotherapeutic interventions for improving mood, behavior, and
functional capacity, even in disorders where progression is
inexorable. Well written, thoroughly referenced, and up to date,
this book is a powerful antidote to the therapeutic nihilism that
often surrounds psychological work with dementia patients.--Jason
Brandt, PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Every neuropsychologist, clinical psychologist, and psychiatrist
working with older people will want to beg, borrow, or buy a copy
of this most impressive book. It is not only comprehensive but also
original in its coverage of the issues faced by people with
dementia and other conditions affecting the older population. The
section on assessment is thorough and links theory and practice
very well, and the coverage of therapy and treatment issues is
especially strong. An important contribution to the
neuropsychological literature, this practical resource is almost
certain to become a classic.--Barbara A. Wilson, PhD, Medical
Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge,
UK
This book presents cutting-edge research and theory on the many
diagnostic and therapeutic issues that confront clinical
neuropsychologists and other health service providers who care for
the steadily increasing number of elderly patients in every
nation's health care system. The editors have integrated
contributions from leading researchers and clinicians into a
single, coherent, and valuable resource.--Robert J. Ivnik, PhD,
Department of Psychology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine,
Rochester, Minnesota
- Unusual in encompassing not only clinical neuropsychological
assessment but also intervention. This volume seems destined to
become a major clinical reference book, useful for doctoral and
postdoctoral students, practitioners, and researchers....The
editors have done a commendable job in creating a unified volume
that is nicely introduced by an integrate model of assessment in
Chapter 1 and an integrated model of intervention in Chapter 10.
--The Gerontologist, 12/2/2005Æ’Æ’ The volume succeeds in every
way, as a major advance and as an essential resource for the
clinical neuropsychologist interested in this realm of
practice....There is not a bad chapter in the book. Every topic
takes readers somewhere better than they were before they cracked
the spine....This is a book project that has been entirely
successful. It needs to be on the neuropsychologist's shelf and
available to students....This book is great by any standard.
--PsycCRITIQUES, 12/2/2005Æ’Æ’ Those who decide to obtain this book
will be very happy with their purchase. The book is comprehensive
and well organized, which makes it an ideal selection as a resource
to place on one's bookshelf. It is up-to-date and differs from
similar books by providing a uniquely neuropsychological
point-of-view about neurodegenerative disorders and related
syndromes rather than simply rehashing methods for conducting a
differential diagnosis. The book's viewpoint is helpful for the
situation commonly encountered in most current clinical settings,
when a multidisciplinary team makes the diagnosis and the
neuropsychologist is asked to provide a functional assessment of
the patient as well as an appropriate intervention. The sections on
intervention are provided in a particularly useful and digestible
format. The outline and theoretical rationale for
neuropsychological intervention in geriatric patients is presented
in an accessible manner, more useful than what is typically found
in most sources on cognitive rehabilitation, including those books
addressing traumatic brain injury intervention strategies. Whether
a veteran or a recent entrant into the field, neuropsychologists
from all backgrounds and specialties will benefit from this book's
well-presented introduction to contemporary practice in geriatric
neuropsychology. --Journal of International Neuropsychological
Society, 12/2/2005
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