Structure of the clinical and geriatric depression: Similarities and differences Cover Image

Struktura kliničke i staračke depresivnosti: sličnosti i razlike
Structure of the clinical and geriatric depression: Similarities and differences

Author(s): Zdenka Novović, Petar Čolović, Maja Babić, Gordana Mišić-Pavkov
Subject(s): Clinical psychology, Health and medicine and law, Gerontology
Published by: Društvo psihologa Srbije
Keywords: Clinical depression; elderly people; MMPI D-scale; method of maximum likelihood;

Summary/Abstract: Studies demonstrating the uniqueness of depression in old age are numerous, but conclusions on the fact if the problems of the elderly people cause depression or if they are a part of depression are not unique. The aim of this paper is to compare the structure of depression of old people without the history of mental illness and middle-aged people treated for depression. The sample consists of 82 healthy inmates of different Homes for the Aged and 78 patients diagnosed with some sort of affective disorder. A depression has been assessed with the shorten version of the MMPI D-scale. The structure of the geriatric and clinical depression has been compared with the method of maximum likelihood, over the matrix of co-variances of answers on the items on the depression scale. The results point out to the statistically significant difference in the structure of depression of the old and clinically depressed individuals. However, half of the items of the D-scale have significant loadings on the factor of depression in both groups. The essence of the depression in both samples is made of cognitive subject matters, depressive affect, decline of motivation and a negative estimate of one's basic abilities. Symptoms concerning low self-esteem, experiencing cognitive deficit, anergy and impaired physical health have been significant in describing the clinical depression, while a feeling of reduced positive stimulation and the affective liability is typical for the depression of geriatric sample. The conclusion is that, despite the differences, there is a common core of symptoms that makes the essence of depression, apart from the samples.

  • Issue Year: 39/2006
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 425-437
  • Page Count: 13
  • Language: Serbian