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Author's reply

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

T. A. Tuma*
Affiliation:
Department of Old Age Psychiatry, General Hospital, Holdforth Road, Hartlepool TS24 9AH
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Abstract

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Columns
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Copyright © 2001 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

Dr Anderson is right in claiming that if patients with dementia are excluded from the calculations, the prognosis for the depression among the elderly will improve: but can dementia be regarded as a successful outcome from index depression which is incident in old age? This question may also be applied to those elderly subjects who had died at follow-up. As such, dementia and death were given special outcome categories in this study.

As to the depression status of the elderly subjects before death, they were: four died during their index illness; six achieved full recovery; two recovered, relapsed and recovered; five had chronic illness and one had dementia.

The depression status of the elderly subjects prior to developing dementia were: one recovered completely; six recovered, relapsed and recovered; and in one the depressive illness became chronic and dementia subsequently developed.

None of the younger adults recovered prior to their death but: three recovered, relapsed and recovered again; one developed chronic depressive illness; one developed post-stroke dementia; and three were classified as dead during the index illness (one by suicide).

Given this new information the reader may work out the figures accordingly.

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