Nearly 1 in 4 Women 60 and Over Use Antidepressants

Via Mercola

antidepressant use in women 60 and older

Story at-a-glance

  • Depression is a mood disorder commonly treated with antidepressants; data reveal 24.3% of women age 60 and older are on antidepressants, which is over twice as many as women age 18 to 39 years
  • The number of women on antidepressants jumps dramatically in the 40-to-59-year age range, which experts believe is related to perimenopause and post-menopause. During these years, hormonal changes can have a significant effect on a woman’s mood
  • The number of women on antidepressants is greater than men in all age ranges. While women are three times more likely to attempt suicide than men, one woman dies for every four men by suicide
  • Experts recognized a rising number of people with depression over the last two decades, but there was a marked jump in the number during the pandemic and the levels have remained high
  • Scientific evidence demonstrates antidepressants do not improve the user’s quality of life, and the effect is only slightly greater than placebo in the short-term and has poor long-term outcomes. This has led many doctors to consider other more effective options

Depression is a mental illness that affects the way you understand and relate to your environment and the people around you. It is deeper than sadness or a low mood and includes symptoms that vary from mild to severe. People who are depressed1 may have trouble sleeping, loss of energy, changes in appetite or loss of interest in activities they once enjoyed.

Depression interferes with personal and work relationships, lowers work and academic performance and affects physical health. The condition can also be lethal, as it is one of the most relevant risk factors in suicide.2

Depression is a mood disorder that is different from sadness. The normal reaction to loss, disappointment or difficult situations is sadness. From time to time, everyone feels sad, but the feelings go away relatively quickly and they do not interfere with your daily activities.

Antidepressant Use Is Highest in Women 60 and Older

According to data gathered from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) from 2015 to 2018, 24.3% of women aged 60 and over were taking antidepressants.3 And, when data from 2009 to 2010 were compared to that gathered from 2017 to 2018, it revealed that antidepressant use had only increased in women, not men.

The data demonstrated an interesting trend in antidepressant use across both sexes when it was analyzed together and separately.4 In each case, the percentage of individuals using antidepressants increased as individuals aged. The lowest percentage was in men aged 18 to 39 years.

In this group, 5.5% of the men used an antidepressant in the past 30 days. In each age group, the percentage of men was roughly half that of women who reported using antidepressants in the past 30 days. Women’s use jumped from 10.3% in 18- to 39-year-olds, to 20.1% in 40- to 59-year-olds and 24.3% in 60-year-olds and over.

Women Experience More Depression Around Menopause

Although most people use the term menopause to describe perimenopause and post-menopausal stages in a woman’s reproductive life cycle, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine,5 menopause is technically just one day. It occurs exactly 12 months after a woman has had her last period. Before this time, women are in a perimenopausal stage, during which hormones are shifting and women have a greater risk of major depression.

According to the North American Menopause Society,6 most women begin perimenopause from age 40 to 58, and the average age is 51. Perimenopause can last up to eight years and is characterized by physical and emotional changes that vary from woman to woman but are based on significant hormonal changes that occur during this period.

As The Wall Street Journal7 notes from the data presented by the National Center for Health Statistics, the percentage of women diagnosed with depression nearly doubles after a woman turns 40, which corresponds exactly with when most women begin perimenopause.

As one paper in Scientific Reports8 notes, “… human menopause is a dynamic neurological transition that significantly impacts brain structure, connectivity and metabolic profile during midlife endocrine aging of the female brain.” Besides the physiological challenges of menopause, women in this age group also may experience greater stress during midlife as they are caring for elderly parents, raising children and often juggling a career, which can contribute to depression.

According to the North American Menopause Society and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is their treatment of choice for hot flashes and night sweats. Dr. Lucy Hutner, a reproductive psychiatrist in New York who spoke with a reporter from The Wall Street Journal explained:9

“Estrogen and progesterone are fluctuating a great deal. Those shifts can be hard for our brain to take … You [women] have a lot on your shoulders, and there’s not a lot of room for taking time for yourself.”

One reason so many women are on antidepressants — which are less effective than HRT — is because they’re “slapped” with them by doctors afraid to prescribe hormone replacement therapy, Stephanie Faubion, medical director of the North American Menopause Society and the director of Mayo Clinic Women’s Health, told the Journal.

Research is underway at the National Institute of Mental Health for other pharmaceutical interventions that act on estrogen receptors in the brain, but I believe there are more natural ways to deal with menopause symptoms.

Natural Strategies for Menopause Symptoms

Leading a healthy lifestyle — including prioritizing healthy diet, sleep and stress relief — is important during perimenopause. Maintaining a healthy weight may also help relieve symptoms, including hot flashes,10 while staying physically active promotes physical and mental health during menopause.11

Eating a diet high in refined carbohydrates, such as sweetened beverages and other ultraprocessed foods, is linked to depression in post-menopausal women12 and may have a similar affect during perimenopause. Nutritional interventions, such as omega-3 fats, also show promise for managing mood and anxiety symptoms in women during the menopausal transition.13

Because perimenopause and menopause are complex and unique to the individual, working with a holistic health care practitioner can help you develop a comprehensive health care plan to address your symptoms and goals. For more information on menopause and dealing with symptoms, see my article, “Science Explains What Happens During Menopause.”

Mental Health Concerns Were Growing Before COVID

According to the figures released by the National Center for Health Statistics, the overall percentage of adults who were treated with antidepressants was 13.2% in the years from 2015 to 2018. This is a significant rise from the reported14 10% who were taking antidepressants as of 2005, and the more than 1 in 10 people over age 12 reported by government researchers in 2011.15

England is also reporting increased use of antidepressants. According to the Pharmaceutical Journal,16 prescribing has risen by 34.8% in six years and increased from 2021 to 2022 for the sixth consecutive year. The raw numbers of individuals who filled a prescription for antidepressants from 2020/2021 to 2021/2022 also increased.

Using the population estimates from the 2021 Census, the Pharmaceutical Journal estimates these numbers mean 14.7% of the overall population in England has received at least one prescription of antidepressant drugs.

According to data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development,17 antidepressant use across 18 European countries rose 2.5 times over the past 20 years, with Iceland having the highest consumption of antidepressants in 2020, and Hungary, the lowest.

After Iceland, the following countries in order of antidepressant consumption were Portugal, the U.K., Sweden and Spain. Data from multiple sources, including the National Institute of Mental Health, National Alliance on Mental Illness and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention show:18

  • Nearly 6 in 10 people who have a mental illness do not get treatment.
  • Serious mental illness costs more than $190 billion in lost earnings.
  • Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S. By age group, it is the third leading cause of death in people aged 15 to 24; the second leading cause in people aged 44 and younger; and the fifth leading cause in people aged 45 to 54.
  • Women are three times more likely to attempt suicide than men.
  • Although women experience depression at nearly twice the rate of men, four men die by suicide for every woman.

Rising Number With Depression During the Pandemic

In October 2021, Boston University reported19 that depression had tripled in the early months of 2020 after the pandemic was declared and only continued to rise. According to data20 from the Boston University School of Public Health, this climbed to 32.8%, affecting 1 in every 3 adults.

Their data revealed that significant predictors for symptoms included being single, experiencing multiple pandemic-related stressors and living in a low-income household. According to one researcher, the pattern of depression does not follow other previous traumatic events.21

“Typically, we would expect depression to peak following the traumatic event and then lower over time. Instead, we found that 12 months into the pandemic, levels of depression remained high.”

Psychiatric Times notes that in addition to increasing the need for mental health care, the pandemic simultaneously restricted access.22 In the 2023 State of Mental Health in America report,23 the key findings included information that 22.87% of adults reported they experienced at least 14 days each month that were mentally unhealthy, yet they could not get help because of cost.

Study: Antidepressants Don’t Improve Quality of Life

According to World Population Review, the U.S. is ranked No. 3 in antidepressant consumption across the world.24 According to Definitive Healthcare, the most common mental health diagnosis in 2021 was a major depressive disorder episode. Definitive Healthcare ranked the top 20 antidepressant medications in 2021 by prescription volume.25

The No. 1 selling antidepressant was sertraline (Zoloft), which belongs to a drug class called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). In 2021, there were 18,337,255 prescriptions for Zoloft, which was over 3 million greater than the second-ranked antidepressant, trazodone (Desyrel). The lowest-selling antidepressant was doxepin, which is a tricyclic antidepressant, with 1,249,531 prescriptions written in 2021.

Scientific evidence challenges the efficacy of antidepressants and demonstrates their use does not improve the user’s quality of life over time.26 One researcher told U.S. News27 they were “surprised by the results” that found similar quality of life measurements in people who used antidepressant medications and those who did not.

He also said clinicians may be “underutilizing or underestimating the role and impact of non-therapeutic interventions.” Other researchers have found the serotonin theory of depression is not supported by evidence.28

Added to this, it can be argued that SSRIs may lower the quality of life in individuals who experience even some of their long list of common adverse side effects, such as:29

Feeling anxious or agitated Indigestion
Constipation or diarrhea Loss of appetite
Blurred vision Sleep disturbances
Loss of libido Difficulty achieving orgasm
Erectile dysfunction

SSRIs are also associated with serotonin syndrome, which raises serotonin levels in the brain and can trigger seizures, irregular heartbeat, confusion, sweating, high fever and loss of consciousness. Another side effect is increased thoughts of suicide or a desire to harm yourself.

The Placebo Effect Is Not Linked to Side Effects

Research has also demonstrated that much of the benefit of antidepressants measured in studies can be attributed to the placebo effect. The New York Times30 notes a study published in PLOS Medicine31 showed antidepressants improved a person’s symptoms by 9.6 points on a depression scale while those who took the placebo improved by 7.8 points.

As the Times explains, this meant “that 80 percent of the benefit people experienced could be attributed to a placebo effect.” A 2018 systematic review and meta-analysis32 of several databases and regulatory agencies found smaller differences than expected between active drugs and placebos when placebo-controlled trials were included.

Conversely, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews33 looked at SSRIs and tricyclic antidepressants and found that in adults with major depressive order all antidepressants outperformed the placebo, with certain antidepressants surpassing the efficacy of reboxetine, trazodone, and fluvoxamine.

Study authors noted, however, that “many trials did not report adequate information about randomization and allocation concealment, which restricts the interpretation of these results.”

Additionally, research has also demonstrated that patients who take antidepressants have short-term benefits but poor long-term outcomes34 and research35 comparing exercise and drug treatment for depression suggests those not taking drugs have a lower risk of relapse. A PLOS One paper notes:36

“The real-world effect of using antidepressant medications does not continue to improve patients’ HRQoL [health-related quality of life] over time. Future studies should not only focus on the short-term effect of pharmacotherapy, it should rather investigate the long-term impact of pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions on these patients’ HRQoL.”

If you’re interested in following science-based recommendations, you’ll place antidepressants at the very bottom of your list of treatment options. If you’re currently on an antidepressant and want to stop, always work with your physician on a weaning schedule after incorporating the following strategies into your routine.

Poor outcomes using antidepressants and a list of adverse events have led many doctors to consider other effective recommendations in the treatment of depression. You can read more about each of the following in “What Does the ‘Best Evidence’ Say About Antidepressants?

Exercise

Nutritional intervention

Marine-based omega-3 fats

B vitamins (including B1, B2, B3, B6, B9 and B12)

Magnesium

Vitamin D

Light therapy

Probiotics

Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT)

Additional strategies that can help improve your mental health:

Minimize electromagnetic field (EMF) exposure Clean up your sleep hygiene
Adaptogens Optimize your gut health
Visualization Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT)
Make sure your cholesterol levels aren’t too low for optimal mental health Ecotherapy
Breathing exercises Helpful supplements:

  • St. John’s Wort (Hypericum perforatum)
  • S-Adenosyl methionine (SAMe)
  • 5-Hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP)
  • XingPiJieYu

 

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39 Comments
Blackdog
Blackdog
April 13, 2023 7:44 am

Get off your ass and get exercise or an outdoor job. Then stop whining.

TCS
TCS
  Blackdog
April 13, 2023 10:01 pm

Don’t tell me how to suffer, asshole. My style ain’t your business.

yeah. that 2nd one was mine

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
April 13, 2023 8:01 am

Had a neighbor who worked in sales for a pharmaceutical company. He claimed a much higher percentage. Of course that could be regional, or he could have been exaggerating but he struck me as an honest man. For a drug dealer.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  hardscrabble farmer
April 13, 2023 9:18 am

Agree. The article implies that only one in eight women 18-39 are on antidepressants. I think it’s much higher.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
  Iska Waran
April 13, 2023 10:40 pm

Democrat females are nukken futz.That’s over half of adult American women.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
April 13, 2023 8:31 am

I think for most people, depression is a one horse pity party. Watch them, do they drink, watch TV? Are they fat?

I’d be depressed though if I had chronic pain.

TCS
TCS
  Glock-N-Load
April 13, 2023 10:04 pm

Here’s my shoes. Go walk a mile and get back to me.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
  TCS
April 13, 2023 10:41 pm

Poor Baby. Here’s another cat.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 13, 2023 9:26 am

How the FDA Buried the Dangers of Antidepressants
The previous struggles with the FDA have so much to teach us about how the FDA has handled the COVID-19 vaccines.
https://pierrekory.substack.com/p/how-the-fda-buried-the-dangers-of

TCS
TCS
April 13, 2023 11:03 am

Nearly 1 in 4 Women 60 and Over Use Antidepressants

That explains why 75% of the women I meet seem crazy.

MOAR PILLS!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TCS
April 13, 2023 11:26 am

They don’t seem crazy. They are crazy. Always have been. Always will be.

There is a reason why women were not allowed to vote until a little more than 100 years ago and the result has been the country going into a shithole ever since. Most women simply can’t think logically. That part of their brain isn’t hooked up properly. All they have is massively defective emotions misdirected into destroying the country.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
  Anonymous
April 13, 2023 10:43 pm

Clap,clap, CLAP!!!

Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid
  Anonymous
April 14, 2023 3:43 am

Sadly,that is correct. I met a few good ones. But they are older,they weren’t good at a younger age admittedly. I see most women promoting woke or pro abortionist bs nowadays. The more old literature I read the more I think many of them have been psychos all along and had to be controlled. There is a reason like you said,they weren’t allowed to vote. I’d add they also weren’t given many rights until the 20th century either. Sure not all of them deserve that. But goddamn I have no pitty firvthe ones on the far left, and abortion promoting ones.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
  TCS
April 13, 2023 10:42 pm

Pills,cats,and box wine empower strong,independent women.

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 13, 2023 11:21 am

The entire article is nothing more than a verification of what I have always known. Most boomer women are total whack jobs who hate men and are always miserable because they bought into the Feminazi Agenda hook, line, and cinder block.

However, there is hope for them. Ship them out to the Amish and put them to work doing all the work that needs to be done. Give the Amish a vacation. Of course, the Amish won’t take a vacation because they know that the boomer women will just trash the place. So the horses get a vacation instead.

Melty
Melty
April 13, 2023 11:29 am

Well they are all crazy, so what is the point?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Melty
April 13, 2023 5:32 pm

The point is that a society you have to be drugged to endure needs to be replaced with something that serves our needs rather than the reverse.

clbrto
clbrto
April 13, 2023 11:36 am

I’m a woman over 60.

I take NO pharmaceuticals, haven’t ever seen a doc in over 5 years – figure I’m healthier on my own.

People need to buck up, and be grateful for what they have.

TCS
TCS
  clbrto
April 13, 2023 12:44 pm

Amen, sister. It can always get worse. In fact, it usually does, don’t it? The soft and the weak ain’t gonna make it.

Or the stupid. OMG how could we forget them? Not gonna make it.

Lucredius
Lucredius
April 13, 2023 11:36 am

If one in four are ‘medicated’, that means 3 out of 4 are untreated for estrogen insanity!

Diet and physical exercise are the answer!

Peace, L.

Tex
Tex
April 13, 2023 1:43 pm

And people talk about “illicit” drugs. This country has drugged the hell out of its people with “legal” psycho drugs and alcohol. BTW, while I cannot see the face in the pic, the body certainly does not look like “most” women I see 60 and older (the skin). Just saying.

My story recalling the days my son played little league baseball. A neighbor lady’s son was on a team and she showed up after work to pick up her son. “It’s been a horrible day at work. I can’t wait to get home and take a Prozac.”

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 13, 2023 3:33 pm

Many ordinary meds cause depression; public trust in Pharma hits new low

How many people are on psychiatric drugs?

SSRI antidepressants increase risk of intracranial hemorrhage

Psst, kid, want drugs? I’m a psychiatrist

Mass shootings and psychiatric drugs: the connection

Psychiatry and the great fraud

How about life in prison for doctors who prescribe psychiatric drugs to toddlers?

World famous psychiatrist says: more psychiatric drug treatment means more mass shootings will happen

When deranged psychiatrists became social justice warriors

Exposing psychiatry as a fraud from top to bottom

.
Anti-psychiatry:
https://www.google.com/search?q=anti-psychiatry+breggin+szasz&source=hp&ei=EVo4ZLOtFtKg5NoPxN6MUA&iflsig=AOEireoAAAAAZDhoIWgQukSvrxZ7h5QQA-cv0R-NKr3S&ved=0ahUKEwjz-c3izaf-AhVSEFkFHUQvAwoQ4dUDCAs&uact=5&oq=anti-psychiatry+breggin+szasz&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3Mtd2l6EAMyBQghEKABMgUIIRCgATIFCCEQoAE6DggAEI8BEOoCEIwDEOUCOg4ILhCPARDqAhCMAxDlAjoRCC4QgAQQsQMQgwEQxwEQ0QM6CwgAEIAEELEDEIMBOgsIABCKBRCxAxCDAToFCC4QgAQ6CwguEIoFELEDEIMBOgUIABCABDoICC4QgAQQsQM6EQguEIoFELEDEIMBEMcBENEDOgsILhDUAhCxAxCABDoOCC4QigUQsQMQgwEQ1AI6CwguEIAEEMcBEK8BOgsILhCABBCxAxDUAjoLCAAQgAQQsQMQyQM6CAgAEIoFEJIDOggIABCABBCSAzoICAAQgAQQsQM6CAguEIAEENQCOgoIABCABBCxAxAKOg0IABCABBCxAxCDARAKOgcIABCABBAKOgQIABAeOgYIABAWEB46CAgAEIoFEIYDOgcIIRCgARAKOgUIIRCrAlDWBli1c2D1dWgBcAB4AIAB_AOIAfAVkgEKMjIuNS4xLjUtMZgBAKABAbABCg&sclient=gws-wiz

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 13, 2023 4:15 pm

I would have thought 3 out of 4. Notice all the advertisements for anti depressants target white broads

BL
BL
April 13, 2023 5:38 pm

They prolly got so sick of Trump and Covid BS, the drugs were the only thing that dulled the pain.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  BL
April 13, 2023 6:33 pm

Doctors don’t do anything but prescribe pills. I was on an SSRI for 10 years. Turns out I needed certain supplements and a thyroid pill and viola, no more SSRI’s needed. No one ever checked my Vit D levels or my thyroid until I found a osteopath that was more geared towards natural health. But Doctors can’t take all the credit because people don’t want to change how they eat or wait for supplements to kick in. It takes some adjustments and it’s really less complicated than trying different drugs to see what works.

But I bet you already knew that.

Tex
Tex
  Mary Christine
April 13, 2023 6:53 pm

I’ve taken a 2665mg capsule of turmeric each day for a couple months and while I cannot say it has helped with arthritis pain I certainly seem to be doing better on that end. I’ve a prescription for meloxicam that says take “as needed” but I decided to try the turmeric instead. I don’t “trust” chemical big pharma stuff. last week I visited my doctor and told him I thought the turmeric was helping the arthritis issue which is mostly in my knuckles. He only said he is not a “herbalist” and that’s ok. I am!

One other thing and I cannot say for certain it has helped. Beer contains something I forget the name that is said to aggravate arthritis. Believe me, for a lifelong beer sot not drinking beer for some time is hard to do. Could be at my age better to do without. 🙁

Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid
  Tex
April 15, 2023 9:24 am

Switch to scotch. Cutting beer out helped me . Mary Jane is also helpful for joint pian and repair. Use sparingly though. It dulls the memory.

Tex
Tex
  Billy the Kid
April 15, 2023 12:19 pm

I was never a scotch drinker. The way I drink beer I’d be dead long ago drinking scotch. My goal is no alcohol until August when I get another “blood test” to see if various levels of this that and the other change. I’ve ruled out diet being the reason. If nothing changes I’ll probably pick up a six-pack of Commotion APA brewed at the Great Raft Brewery.

At my age I ain’t concerned about the memory at least the long term memory. It’s sharp as a tack. The short term, well, “babe, don’t forget to get milk.” Hemp flower is the only “thing” “legal” in Texas and all the top dog Texas government types have said they will not remove the other as a sched 1. WTF does that tell you about Texas government’s relationship with the fed? Perhaps total HYPOCRISY this being only one example.

Ginger
Ginger
April 13, 2023 7:47 pm

Studies show nine out of ten men that try camels prefer women.
To be fair this poll does not accurately show the results of Minneapolis or Jersey City.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Ginger
April 13, 2023 9:00 pm

I see what you did there … nice one …

TCS
TCS
  Anthony Aaron
April 13, 2023 9:53 pm

It was.

TCS
TCS
  Ginger
April 13, 2023 9:53 pm

But can you gender the Moreley Man from X Files? Would you dare risk that?

A cruel accountant
A cruel accountant
April 13, 2023 9:40 pm

Young hot women have men fawning over them. They get use to it and expect it to never stop until they die.

Then they hit the wall! They become invisible. It destroys them.

TCS
TCS
  A cruel accountant
April 13, 2023 9:57 pm

ONLY IF they didn’t make bank when the iron was hot.

Smart women get dick whenever they want it.

Conversely, men who didn’t “make bank” in the same time frame with the same women are happy as AF and laughing at the stupid bitches they managed to escape!

It all works out in someone’s end.

TCS
TCS
April 13, 2023 9:49 pm

All right. Here’s the truth with no more joking around.

Men: You need to start respecting your women at the first opportunity.

Women: Give us men a reason to respect you again.

That’s the ONLY way this shit will EVER work.

Pretending you’re something you’re not isn’t “brave”. It’s fucking INSANE. It won’t even further your insane beliefs because you’ll have no one to pass it on to!

Aand..we’ll leave it right there for now.

Call me Jack
Call me Jack
April 13, 2023 10:39 pm

The headline should read,” American females over 60 are under medicated.”

k31
k31
April 14, 2023 12:08 am

The cure is diet (possible supplementation), exercise, routine, sunlight, actively seeking peace and right relationships.

Or you could try a pill that will destroy your normal brain function.

Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid
April 14, 2023 3:33 am

Now the question is are women less crazy or much much crazier on these SSRI’s? My experience has be them becoming more sociopathic, bordering on psychopathic types after treatments. Too many girlfriends that hid being on them to. We need to have a public discussion about the legality and availability of these poisons to new patients. SSRI’s are poison.

Tex
Tex
  Billy the Kid
April 15, 2023 12:42 pm

Were they able to have orgasms? Just sticking to the topic as the article does mention the inability as a “side effect”. I didn’t see anything about possibly going blind though as a result of taking the things. Could be more related to the male enhancement drugs.