Late-Life Depression: What Families Need to Know
Carolyn “Callie” Kundert, PA-C

Key Takeaways
- Depression in older adults often shows up as physical complaints, fatigue, and withdrawal rather than sadness. This is one of the main reasons it gets missed by families and providers alike.
- An estimated two-thirds of older adults with mental health problems do not receive the treatment they need. The gap between how common late-life depression is and how often it gets treated is one of the largest in mental health care.
- Depression is never a normal part of aging. It is a medical condition that responds to treatment at every age, and older adults who receive appropriate care see real improvement.
- Triggers go far beyond retirement. Loss of a spouse, declining physical health, chronic pain, shrinking social circles, and the erosion of independence can all contribute to depression in later life.
- The generation that was taught to push through is the generation least likely to name what they’re feeling. Adult children often need to be the ones who start the conversation.
You’ve noticed something has changed. Your parent has pulled back from things they used to enjoy. They’re more irritable, or quieter than usual. They mention aches and fatigue more than they used to, but when you ask how they’re doing, the answer is always the same: “I’m fine.”
They may not be fine. And they may not have the language, or the willingness, to tell you what’s actually going on.
How Depression Shows Up Differently in Older Adults
When most people picture depression, they picture sadness. In older adults, depression often presents differently. Older adults often express depression through physical complaints as much as, or even more than, emotional ones, which makes them easy to attribute to aging or medical conditions rather than to a treatable mood disorder.
Common presentations in older adults include:
- Persistent fatigue and low energy that aren’t fully explained by physical health alone.
- Unexplained aches and pains, especially headaches, digestive problems, or worsening chronic pain.
- Sleep disruption, including early morning waking or sleeping far more than usual
- Loss of appetite or weight changes without a clear medical cause.
- Cognitive changes like difficulty concentrating, indecisiveness, or memory problems that can be mistaken for early dementia. While depression often develops gradually, a sudden change in thinking or alertness should prompt urgent medical evaluation, as conditions such as delirium can have serious medical causes.
- Withdrawal from social activities and relationships, not because of mobility but because of lost interest.
An older adult experiencing depression may never use the word “depressed.” They may say they’re tired, or that nothing feels worth doing anymore, or that their body just isn’t what it used to be. Listening for what’s underneath those statements, rather than taking them at face value, is often where recognition begins.

Why Late-Life Depression Goes Undiagnosed
Late-life depression is more common than dementia in people over 60, yet it remains significantly underdiagnosed and undertreated. There are several reasons this gap persists.
The most common is that symptoms get confused with normal aging. Providers and families may assume that low energy, poor sleep, and declining interest are simply what happens as people get older. They’re not. These are symptoms with causes that respond to treatment.
Physical illness makes the picture murkier. When someone has diabetes, heart disease, or chronic pain, it’s easy to attribute fatigue and low mood to those conditions alone. But depression and physical illness frequently coexist, and treating one without addressing the other leaves gaps in care. Depression can also make chronic medical conditions harder to manage, affecting motivation, medication adherence, physical activity, and overall recovery.
Generational attitudes toward mental health create another barrier. Many older adults were raised in a culture that treated emotional difficulty as a private matter, not a medical one. The idea of seeking psychiatric care can feel foreign or shameful. “I should be able to handle this” is a belief many carry, and it functions as a barrier to care as real as any logistical one.
Providers don’t always screen, either. Primary care visits for older adults tend to focus on physical complaints. Depression screening isn’t always part of the conversation, and older adults are unlikely to bring it up themselves.
The result: two-thirds of older adults with mental health problems do not receive the treatment they need.
What Triggers Depression in Later Life
Retirement is one commonly discussed trigger, but it’s far from the only one. The losses that accumulate in later life are significant, and any one of them can contribute to a depressive episode.
Loss of a spouse or close friends is often the most visible trigger. Grief and depression are not the same thing, but prolonged grief can transition into depression, especially when social support is limited. Each loss removes a point of connection and shared history that may not be replaced.
Declining physical health plays a significant role. A new diagnosis, a fall, surgery, or the gradual loss of physical capability can shift how someone sees themselves and their future. Chronic pain in particular has a strong, well-documented relationship with depression.
Loss of independence is harder to see from the outside but deeply felt. Giving up driving, needing help with daily tasks, or moving out of a family home can feel like losing control over your own life. That erosion of autonomy is a significant risk factor for depression.
Social isolation compounds everything. When peers die, family moves away, and mobility decreases, the world gets smaller. Loneliness and social isolation are closely linked to depression in later life, and the relationship runs in both directions.
Medication side effects are an underrecognized contributor. Some medications commonly prescribed to older adults, including certain blood pressure medications, steroids, and pain relievers, can contribute to depressive symptoms.
None of these triggers make depression inevitable. But they do make it more likely, and recognizing the pattern early changes outcomes significantly.
How to Talk to a Parent Who Won’t Ask for Help

If your parent is showing signs of depression but won’t acknowledge it, you’re not alone. This is one of the most common challenges adult children face, and there’s no single script that works for everyone. But some approaches consistently help more than others.
- Name what you’re seeing, not what you’re diagnosing. “I’ve noticed you haven’t been going to your book club, and you mentioned you’re not sleeping well. I’m concerned about you” is more effective than “I think you’re depressed.”
- Normalize treatment. For a generation that views mental health care as a last resort, hearing that depression is a treatable medical condition, like diabetes or hypertension, can reframe the conversation. It’s not about weakness. It’s about brain chemistry.
- Offer to go with them. The barrier is often not resistance to help itself but the logistics and vulnerability of asking for it. Offering to make the call, drive to the appointment, or sit in the waiting room removes practical obstacles.
- Mention telehealth as an option. For older adults with mobility challenges, transportation barriers, or discomfort with in-person visits, telepsychiatry has been a meaningful access point. Many find it easier to talk to a provider from the familiarity of their own home.
- Don’t give up after one conversation. The first attempt may be met with deflection. That doesn’t mean it wasn’t heard. Revisit it gently. Consistency matters more than any single exchange.
Final Thoughts
Late-life depression is real, it’s common, and it responds to treatment. The challenge is that the people most affected are often the least likely to ask for help, and the symptoms are easily mistaken for something else.
If you’re watching a parent or loved one retreat from life in ways that don’t feel right, trust that observation. You may need to be the one who bridges the gap between what they’re experiencing and the care that could help.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
1. Is depression a normal part of getting older?
No. While older adults face circumstances that can increase risk for depression, depression itself is never a normal or expected part of aging. It is a medical condition with effective treatments, and older adults who receive appropriate care see meaningful improvement.
2. How do I know if it’s depression or just grief?
Grief and depression share many symptoms, including sadness, sleep disruption, and loss of interest. The distinction is often in duration and trajectory. Grief tends to come in waves and gradually soften. Depression persists, deepens, and may include feelings of worthlessness, hopelessness, or persistent inability to function. If grief doesn’t begin to lift over time, or if it worsens, a professional evaluation is warranted.
3. Can depression be treated in older adults the same way it’s treated in younger people?
Yes, though treatment may need to account for other medications and health conditions. Psychotherapy, medication, or both are effective for older adults. Providers experienced in working with this age group can tailor the approach to account for the full clinical picture.
4. My parent refuses to see a mental health provider. What can I do?
Start with their primary care physician, who may be a more trusted and familiar figure. Many primary care providers can screen for depression and initiate treatment or make a referral. Framing it as a routine health conversation rather than a mental health intervention can also help reduce resistance.
Responsibly edited by AI
Explore More
Animo Sano Psychiatry is now serving patients across multiple states. If you’d like to schedule an appointment, please contact us to get started.
Get Access to Behavioral Health Care
Let’s take your first step towards. Press the button to get started. We’ll be back to you as soon as possible.ecovery, together.


