A clear, well written guide that should help clinicians and researchers expand the use of IPT for the elderly.--Peter V. Rabins, MD, MPH, Co-Director, Division of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neuropsychiatry, John Hopkins School of Medicine Dr. Miller draws from a deep well of professional and research experience to create a guide for clinicians who work with older adults with cognitive problems and depression. The book builds upon the remarkable success of Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) in effectively treating depression and other disorders. The book is a creative adaptation of IPT that is rich with clinical examples and practical advice. Clinician's Guide is a unique contribution to psychotherapeutic efforts to provide thoughtful and humane care to older persons struggling with loss of cognitive ability and depression as well as their family members.--Gregory A. Hinrichsen, PhD, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, N.Y.; Health and Aging Policy Fellow, Washington, D.C. Dr. Miller is the first geriatric psychiatrist to translate and appropriately modify evidence-based IPT to address the needs of persons with early changes in cognition and executive function. This innovative guide takes a welcome person-and-family-centered approach, highlighting distressing early cognitive changes and their concomitant social and personal consequences. Diverse and plentiful in-depth case vignettes illustrate how to optimize understanding and function as well as minimize depression in both persons with cognitive decline and their family members. This is the mental health professional's guide for our present and future as an aging society.--Lisa P. Gwyther, MSW, LCSW, Director, Duke Aging Center Family Support Program; President, Gerontological Society of America, 2008 Through careful explanation of strategies and tactics and through vivid case descriptions, Dr. Miller demonstrates that not only is it possible to use psychotherapy with depressed elders with cognitive impairment, but that such individuals are likely to take particular comfort from being able to do the work of interpersonal psychotherapy and to reap the benefits in terms of improved depressive symptoms. Dr. Miller is to be congratulated on this clear and highly useful aid to clinicians working with depression in older individuals.--Ellen Frank, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Professor of Psychology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Given the demographic imperative to meet the mental health needs of our aging population, Miller takes on an important and ambitious task in his book...we are in need of wise, clinically informed approaches to the treatment of late-life mental illness. For those readers looking for a useful clinical text that is well written, clinically engaging, and brimming with helpful and moving case examples, this book is for you!--As reviewed by Deborah King in PsycCRITIQUES