Abstract
Objective:
Method:
A sample of 1119 community residents age 65 years and over was selected using the provincial health insurance database. Data on mental disorders were collected using the Geriatric Mental State questionnaire, and diagnoses were made with the Automated Geriatric Examination for Computer Assisted Taxonomy computer program. Prevalence rates, standard errors, and logistic regression coefficients were estimated using software designed to analyze survey data.
Results:
The prevalence rates of GMS-AGECAT depression and organic disorder were 11.2% and 2.9% respectively. For depression there was a statistically significant difference in the prevalence rates for males (7.3%) and females (14.1%) (P = 0.003), and for organic disorder there was a statistically significant increasing trend across age-groups for females (P < 0.0001). The prevalence rate of GMS-AGECAT depression in Edmonton is comparable to rates reported from several European studies but is much higher than the 6-month prevalence rate of DIS-DSM-III major depression of 1.2% based on an earlier Edmonton survey.
Conclusions:
GMS-AGECAT depression is a depressive syndrome that has a larger prevalence rate than DIS-DSM-III major depression. Community surveys that measure only the prevalence rate of DSM-III major depression may be missing clinically significant cases of geriatric depression.
