Deakin University
Browse

Stability and change in level of probable depression and depressive symptoms in a sample of middle and older-aged adults

Version 2 2024-06-06, 05:04
Version 1 2023-03-08, 03:05
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 05:04 authored by RA Burns, Peter ButterworthPeter Butterworth, M Luszcz, KJ Anstey
ABSTRACTBackground: Findings from studies investigating depression in adults in late life are mixed due to a lack of large longitudinal studies with the power necessary to yield reliable estimates of stability or change. We examined the long-term stability of probable depression and depressive symptomology over a 13-year period in the Dynamic Analyses to Optimize Ageing (DYNOPTA) project.Methods: Community-living participants (N = 35,200) were aged 45–103 at baseline, predominantly female (79%), partnered (73%), and educated to secondary school only (61%) and followed for up to 13 years.Results: At baseline, increased age was associated with lower prevalence of probable depression and depressive symptomology. Over time, prevalence of probable depression was stable while levels of depressive symptomology reported a small decline. However, this finding was not consistent for all age groups; there was evidence for increasing levels of depressive symptomology, but not probable depression, as individuals aged. This effect was particularly notable among males aged 70 plus years.Conclusions: These results answer important questions relating to the longitudinal prevalence of probable depression and depressive symptomology in a sample of older Australians. These findings have policy implications for mental health service provision for older adults.

History

Related Materials

Location

England

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

International Psychogeriatrics

Volume

25

Pagination

303-309

ISSN

1041-6102

eISSN

1741-203X

Issue

2

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS