https://www.selleckchem.com/products/orforglipron-ly3502970.html Late life is a period during which individuals are increasingly confronted with challenges and losses. These challenges can have a negative impact on late life functioning, which is often reflected in poor well-being or an increase in depressive feelings. Current research points out that positive psychological resources might enhance coping with late life stressors. Forgiveness is a variable that has received increasing interest as a positive psychological resource and is linked with several aspects of late life health and well-being. The idea of forgiveness being pivotal in late life can be framed within the life stage theory of Erikson. Erikson's psychosocial crisis in late life consists of finding a balance between feelings of despair and the achievement of ego-integrity and it is considered as a potential explaining process in the association between forgiveness and positive late life functioning. The results of three quantitative studies in older adults (75+) provide indeed preliminary evidence that forgiveness is a resource in late life. They show that the relationship between forgiveness and late life well-being can be partly explained by the developmental task of finding a balance between integrity and despair. Pharmacotherapy in older adults with personality disorders (PD) is a new and important area of attention. Nowadays, symptom based pharmacotherapy in older adults with PD is based on multidisciplinary guidelines, which are constructed on research performed in patients up to 50 years of age. There is no specific guideline for older adults with PD. Providing a description of patient characteristics number of comorbid psychiatric disorders, use of medication, including polypharmacy, in older adults (≥ 65 years) with personality disorders. A retrospective cross-sectional patient file study (n = 50) in a clinical center of excellence for older adults with personality disorders (outpatient sett