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Signs of 'old age' may be symptoms of depression

Older patients and their doctors sometimes act as if depression is a result of aging, not a disease that can be deadly when untreated.

By EDWARD R. PEREZ, Associated Press
March 25, 2003


LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- Old-age symptoms can mask signs of depression, making it difficult to diagnose and treat about 2-million older adults nationwide who suffer from depression, doctors say.

Seniors do not show classic signs of depression during visits to their family practitioners, but instead complain of various aches and pains, which Dr. Bradley Diner says are likely related to depression.

"One of the biggest red flags is when they have symptoms with no obvious cause, when in fact, what they have is depression," said Diner, a psychiatrist who specializes in treating the elderly.

Because doctors and patients have been conditioned to expect certain ailments in seniors -- weight loss, fatigue, poor concentration, forgetfulness -- some doctors overlook the possibility of depression and some patients forego seeking help. Both sides simply regard the ailments as an inevitable side-effect of aging.

"People would think, 'If you're old and sick, you'd be depressed, too.' We don't buy that anymore," said Dr. Mark D. Miller, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh. "A lot of people are under the impression that depression is a weakness; it's not -- it's not a character flaw to admit you have it."

Miller, who wrote the book Living Longer Depression Free, said most people perceive depression as something they can "get over," but it is a debilitating illness.

"Once it gets hold of you, it can be just as fatal as pneumonia," he said. "You can look physically normal, but it's not something you can snap yourself out of."

The National Institute of Mental Health, a federal group established in 1946 to fund mental-illness research, found that depression is a significant predictor of suicide in older adults who, the group said, are disproportionately more likely to take their own lives than other age groups.

Miller said 98 percent of all suicides at any age are the result of depression, but the illness can be prevented.

"If you treat it adequately and treat it early, it's preventable," he said. "When depression is removed, attitude and the ability to cope changes."

Dr. Helen Lavertsky, a researcher in geriatric depression at the University of California at Los Angeles, said the elderly are not comfortable admitting they might be depressed.

"Elderly citizens see it as a stigma, something embarrassing," Lavertsky said. "Some older primary care physicians may also not feel comfortable asking their patients if they feel depressed -- they (the doctors) just weren't trained that way."

Dr. G. Richard Smith, chief of psychiatry at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, helped develop a new questionnaire, called the Depression-Arkansas Scale, which can help primary care physicians better diagnose and treat patients. Some of the 11 questions on the form seek to determine whether the patient feels sad, lethargic, guilty, distracted or suicidal.

Smith said that for every 10 people suffering from depression, five receive treatment; of those five, only one receives appropriate care.

"There will never be enough psychiatrists in the U.S. to treat it," he said.

On the Web:

National Institute of Mental Health: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/

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