Prevalence of depressive symptoms among rural elderly: Examining the need for mental health services. |
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Authors: | Rokke, Paul D. Klenow, Daniel J. |
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Abstract: | Reexamined the prevalence of depressive symptoms among 1,724 rural, noninstitutionalized older adults (aged 59–99 yrs) and documented the need for mental health services as they relate to depression and potential barriers to receiving needed services. A telephone survey was conducted in North Dakota, with a random sample drawn from each of 8 human service districts. Instruments included the Geriatric Depression Scale and the CAGE. Results indicate that the prevalence of depression was relatively low. Controlling for potential alcohol abuse, cognitive impairment, and medical problems, the study found that 5% of older adults reported current depressive symptomatology. When using a cutoff score that is likely to correspond to a diagnosis of major depression, the study found a prevalence rate of 1.6%. Of those reporting significant levels of depression, only 27.6% were currently being treated for an emotional problem. The survey data suggested that cost, transportation, and concern about stigma are not major barriers to receiving needed mental health services. Rather, lack of awareness of available services and a lack of routine contact with mental health service providers are important factors that limit service utilization. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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