Hutchinson's Theory In Late Adulthood

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• Critically apply an idea to one’s own personal or professional experiences.

As discussed by Hutchinson (2015) in late adulthood; among the risk factors leading to reversible dementia depression was strongly relative to my aunt’s situation; she is now entering into very late adulthood. (p. 383)

A quick summary of the path which led to where she is now: After I moved to New Jersey from Staten Island, my aunt and uncle were the only family members left in New York. Their two sons had moved to Georgia over a decade ago. My aunt decided she wanted to live in Colorado, two thousand miles from any family member against her sons’ wishes. My uncle’s health was declining at the time. He was in his late seventies and diagnosed with emphysema and Parkinson’s disease. The doctors were concerned about the altitude of Colorado initially but after they made the move to a plateau city, he was able to adjust but died within two years after the move.

They were married almost fifty years. Of those fifty years, she was the epitome of an old-fashioned female …show more content…

Hutchison (2015) discussed grief work researched by Lindemann (1944) and of the common reactions to loss he identified, my aunt very likely experienced “loss of patterns of conduct, where the ability to carry out routine behaviors is lost” (p.438). Wortman & Silver (1990) proposed four patterns of grieving. My aunt more than likely would have been categorized as experiencing delayed grief. Delayed, postponed inhibited or suppressed grief is demonstrated very slightly “in the first few months after the loss, but high levels of distress at some later point” (p. 440). At the time of her husband’s death, she was very calm and did not seem to be grieving at all, it was if he went on a trip and would be back eventually. However, her behavior after the year of bereavement counseling told a different

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