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Exactly twenty years have passed since John Besson’s chapter on ‘Imaging’ in the previous edition of these seminars. There has been an amazing proliferation of imaging methods, but very little change in the clinical imaging protocols available to the average UK clinician. X-ray computed tomography still seems to be the mainstay of assessment in the standard psychiatric memory clinic. MRI tends to be available, but only as a ‘special treat’, often mediated by neurologists, and emission tomography, such as SPECT and PET, are only used in highly specialized cases outside a few academic centers. Apart from generic NHS austerity, ‘health without mental health’, and institutional ageism, what could be the reasons for this?

Type

Chapter

Book title

Seminars in Old Age Psychiatry

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Publication Date

04/02/2018