You should never underestimate the incapacitating feelings associated
with geriatric depression. In my clinical work, I've heard many
people over the years blame seniors for their conditions as if they
did not have a strong enough will to relieve their suffering on their
own. The blaming actually makes it much worse as people then start
feeling responsible for their condition. I don't believe that many
people choose to feel bad. And certainly, it doesn't make the
situation better for people to feel like it is their fault.
The elderly are frailer and their bodies are more susceptible to a
variety of circumstances and conditions which contribute to their
geriatric depression. There are many physical conditions including
strokes, Parkinson's disease, and multiple sclerosis which seem to
predispose seniors and others to depression. Also, medications are
infamous for increasing the level of depression among the elderly. In
addition to these comorbid medical conditions which seem to predispose
or exacerbate the experience of depression among the elderly,
geriatric depression is frequently precipitated by changing life
circumstances as individuals proceed into their senior years.
The most prominent life circumstance that contributes to geriatric
depression is the experience of loss. As seniors are no longer able to
maintain their homes for example, they are frequently required to move
into nursing facilities, move in with family members or otherwise
unwillingly change their living circumstances. This is a tremendous
loss for them to endure. Loss is also common in many other forms
including loss of physical mobility, driving privileges and the loss
of finances and the status of working or having a profession. When we
do not choose circumstances but are forced into them as result of the
aging process, this experience frequently leads to a feeling of loss..
While statistics very significantly it is believed that geriatric
depression is experienced by approximately one out of every six older
people. Some of these people have a recurrence of depression
experienced earlier in their life. For others, their first clinically
diagnosed emotional problem arises in the form of geriatric
depression.