If your 75-year-old client stops coming to therapy, it might not be them. It might be your approach.
In this episode, I explore why therapy must evolve, just like people, with age. I share five powerful ways to evolve your practice to better serve older adults.
While many therapists are trained to work with adults in general, most graduate and continuing education programs focus on midlife or younger adulthood, often excluding older adulthood entirely. The result is a significant gap in care.
Therapy that resonates with younger adults can fall flat or even feel dismissive for older clients. When therapists don’t adapt their approach, clients may feel unseen, misunderstood, or disengaged—not because they’re resistant, but because the therapy model doesn’t reflect their stage of life.
This episode will help you recognize what shifts with age, why it matters in clinical practice, and how to modify your work for more effective and compassionate outcome.
It’s only with your help that we can meet the mental health needs of older adults. So thank you for being here—and thank you for doing your part.
Learn to adapt your practice for older adults and join me for my 90min CE course on 8/21/25 12-1:30ET
If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a colleague or friend. Together, we’re building a movement for mental health and aging. Because there is no expiration date on healing, transformation, and growth.
Dr. Regina Koepp is a board certified clinical psychologist, clinical geropsychologist, and founder and CEO of the Center for Mental Health & Aging: the “go to” place for mental health and aging. Dr. Koepp is a sought after speaker on the topics of mental health and aging, caregiving, ageism, resilience, intimacy in the context of life altering Illness, and dementia and sexual expression. Dr. Koepp is on a mission to ensure mental health and belonging for older adults, because every person at every age is worthy of healing, transformation, and love. Learn more about Dr. Regina Koepp here.
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Older adults deserve high quality mental health care.
Therapists deserve the training to provide that care.