Abstract
One hundred and seventy‐six homebound elderly patients referred for psychiatric evaluation by family, physician, or community agency were assessed in the home by a geriatrician psychiatrist, accompanied by those involved with the patient's care, whenever possible. Careful attention was paid to the interaction between psychiatric, medical, and social parameters and their collective effect on the aging patient. The most common discrete psychiatric diagnoses were dementia, with or without secondary symptoms; major depression; and paranoid states without dementia. Assessment resulted in home treatment and maintenance through a variety of supportive interventions frequently accompanied by chemotherapy, emergency psychiatric and medical hospitalization, and placement, as well as education of family and community workers. J Am Geriatr Soc 33:9, 1985

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