Abstract

Over the last few decades, life expectancy has increased, particularly for old age people. This has resulted in an increased number of family members at a given time leading to more crowded households and thus causing stress in members of joint or large families. Lack of family support, the death of a loved one, isolation in the community due to poor physical health, and generational and communication gaps within the family, even though they reside under the same roof, are just a few of the things that can cause loneliness. These issues affect the mental health of elderly persons and may occasionally result in depression. Depression's high morbidity and mortality rates, particularly in older people, make it a serious public health concern. This review summarises that elderly persons have a higher prevalence of depression; regarding routine depression screening for the older population and their counselling, no precise guidelines are available. We used Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) phrases to search for published articles/studies/research in the English language in PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar. We also searched numerous government websites for recent data on geriatric depression and we analysed 35 articles. Old age is the transition stage where an individual must deal with various physical and mental health problems due to brain ageing that leads to changes in behaviour that affect their social well-being. The existing mental health programme should pay more attention to the problems with senior depression. In order to deal with the problem of depression, they might also involve non-governmental organisations (NGOs).

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