New
Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items
from Amazon
Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Older women
more likely to become, remain depressed than
older men
Newswise — Older women
appear more susceptible to depression and
more likely to stay depressed but less
likely to die while depressed than older
men, factors that contribute to the higher
burden of depression among older women,
according to a report in the February issue
of Archives of General Psychiatry, one of
the JAMA/Archives journals.
Major depression affects
approximately 1 percent to 2 percent of
older adults living in the community, but as
many as 20 percent experience symptoms of
depression, according to background
information in the article. These symptoms
are more likely to affect older women than
older men for reasons that are unclear.
Lisa C. Barry, Ph.D.,
M.P.H., of Yale University School of
Medicine, New Haven, Conn., and colleagues
evaluated a group of 754 individuals age 70
and older (average age 78.4) beginning in
1998.
At the beginning of the
study and at follow-up assessments conducted
every 18 months, participants were asked to
provide demographic information, take
cognitive tests and report any medical
conditions. They also were screened for
symptoms of depression—such as lack of
appetite, feeling sad or sleep
problems—during the previous week.
Over the course of the
study, 269 (35.7 percent) of the
participants were depressed at some point.
Of those, 48 (17.8 percent) remained
depressed during two consecutive time
periods, 30 (11.2 percent) at three time
points, 17 (6.3 percent) at four points and
12 (4.5 percent) at all five.
More women than men were
depressed at each 18-month follow-up and
women were more likely than men to
experience depression at subsequent time
points.
“Adjusting for other
demographic characteristics, women had a
higher likelihood of transitioning from
non-depressed to depressed and a lower
likelihood of transitioning from depressed
to non-depressed or death,” the authors
write.
The findings were consistent over the four time
intervals, providing strong evidence that
depression is more persistent in older women
than older men, the authors note. This is
surprising, because women are more likely to
receive medications or other treatment for
depression.
“Whether women are
treated less aggressively than men for
late-life depression or are less likely to
respond to conventional treatment is not
known but should be the focus of future
research,” the authors write.
“In addition, nearly 40
percent of the depressed participants in
this study were depressed during at least
two consecutive time points, highlighting
the need to initiate and potentially
maintain antidepressant treatment after
resolution of the initial depressive
episode.”
...
...
...