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A
Hidden Disease:
In Older Blacks,
Depression Often Goes Untreated
Whites Are Far More
Likely to Be Prescribed
Antidepressant Drugs
Although depression is a common and troubling problem among the
elderly, a July 2000 study suggests that its symptoms are being overlooked
in many older black people. Elderly white people, the study found, are more
than three times as likely to be prescribed
anti-depressant
drugs as elderly blacks.
In the July 2000 issue of the American
Journal of Psychiatry, study author Dan Blazer, MD, PhD and colleagues from
Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C., report the results of a 10 year
survey of more than 4,000 people age 65 and older.
"Misconceptions of clinical depression as a weakness of
character or a normal [part] of aging, rather than a treatable illness, are
common," says George S. Zubenko, MD, PhD. Zubenko is a professor of
psychiatry and biological sciences at the University of Pittsburgh School of
Medicine.
A study that Zubenko conducted a few years ago
suggested that older, depressed blacks responded better to antidepressants than
whites. But further investigation found that, unlike whites with depression,
the majority of blacks were never even treated for their depression until they
required hospitalization.
Zubenko says that both patients and doctors may
attribute signs of
depression -- such as decreases in mood, interest, energy, sleep, and
concentration -- to age-related medical conditions. "This contributes to
the underdiagnosis of depression," he says.
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