Depression in Older Adults
West Virginia University · University of California San Diego · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Depression is less prevalent among older adults than among younger adults, but it can have serious consequences. More than half of cases represent a first onset in later life. Although suicide rates in the elderly are declining, they are still higher than in younger adults and are more closely associated with depression. Depressed older adults are less likely to endorse affective symptoms and more likely to display cognitive changes, somatic symptoms, and loss of interest than are depressed younger adults. Risk factors leading to the development of late-life depression likely comprise complex interactions among genetic vulnerabilities, cognitive diathesis, age-associated neurobiological changes, and stressful…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 85.59
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 163
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Depression (economics)
- Psychology
- Clinical psychology
- Late life depression
- Cognition
- Psychological intervention
- Cognitive behavioral therapy
- Suicidal ideation