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Clinical Interventions in Aging
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Clinical interventions for late-life anxious depression
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Authors: Gretchen J Diefenbach, John Goethe
Published Date January 2006
Volume 2006:1(1) Pages 41 - 50
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S
Gretchen J Diefenbach1, John Goethe2
1Anxiety Disorders Center, Hartford Hospital, Institute of Living, Hartford, CT, USA; 2Braceland Center for Mental Health and Aging, Hartford Hospital, Institute of Living, Hartford, CT, USA
Abstract: Anxiety symptoms are frequently present in patients with late-life depression. The designation “anxious depression” has been used to describe major depressive disorder (MDD) accompanied by clinically significant but subsyndromal anxiety symptoms. MDD may also present comorbid with diagnosable anxiety disorders, although this presentation is less common in late life. Diagnosis of anxious depression in the elderly is complicated by several factors (eg, their tendency to experience and report psychiatric symptoms as somatic illness) and is associated with a more severe clinical presentation, increased risk for suicidal ideation, increased disability, and poorer prognosis. Standard pharmacotherapy for depression may be sufficient but for many patients must be modified or augmented. Psychosocial interventions may also be an important component in the treatment of these patients, although no specific psychosocial treatments have been developed for late-life anxious depression.
Keywords: late-life, anxious depression, geriatric, anxiety, depression
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