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Find more NIMH pages about: Depression, Older Adults, Medications, Alzheimers Disease

Older Adults and Mental Health

Depression

Depression is not a normal part of aging. Yet depression is a widely underrecognized and undertreated medical illness.

Depression often co-occurs with other serious illnesses, such as heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer, and Parkinson's disease. Because many older adults face these illnesses as well as various social and economic difficulties, health care professionals may mistakenly conclude that depression is a normal consequence of these problems — an attitude often shared by patients themselves.

These factors together contribute to the underdiagnosis and undertreatment of depressive disorders in older people. Depression can and should be treated when it co-occurs with other illnesses, for untreated depression can delay recovery from or worsen the outcome of these other illnesses.

Visit the following NIMH pages for more information on depression:

Alzheimer’s Disease and Antipsychotic Medications

Commonly prescribed antipsychotic medications used to treat Alzheimer's patients with delusions, aggression, hallucinations, and other similar symptoms can benefit some patients, but they appear to be no more effective than a placebo when adverse side effects are considered.

Visit the following NIMH pages for more information on Alzheimer's Disease and Antipsychotic Medications:

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