BASE-Publications: Abstracts
Psychiatrists'
diagnoses of subthreshold depression in old age: Frequency and correlates
Bernhard Geiselmann, Michael Linden, & Hanfried Helmchen
(2001)
Psychological Medicine, 31, 51-63
Background: Depressive syndromes not fulfilling the criteria for
specified disorders (subthreshold depression, SD) may be clinically important.
We aimed to study SD in old and very old age, in comparison with subjects with
no depressive symptoms (NDS) and subjects with major depression (MD).
Methods: A community-based random sample of 516 subjects, age 70 to 100
years and over, stratified by age and sex, was examined. All participants were
investigated by psychiatrists and by geriatricians independently.
Results: In 16.5% (N = 85) of the study subjects SD was identified.
Study subjects with SD had, similarly to the subjects with MD, significantly
more somatic diagnoses and used more somatic as well as psychotropic
medications than the subjects with NDS. Self-ratings and observer ratings of
depression indicated that SD was a milder depressive state than MD.
Conclusions: Compared with MD, SD is probably a milder form of
depression. The increased use of psychotropic medications indicates that at
least a portion of these individuals have a disorder requiring treatment. One
of the characteristics of SD is co-morbidity with somatic illnesses and
physical disability.