# Geographic Disparities of Community-level 65+ Depression Prevalence in Five New England States

**Authors:** Elizabeth Dugan, Taylor Jansen, Qian Song, Yan-Jhu Su, Shan Qu, Mengshi Liu

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2588 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study finds that depression rates among people over 65 vary significantly by location in New England, with urban and rural areas showing different patterns.

## Contribution

The study identifies geographic disparities in depression prevalence among older adults in five New England states using detailed community-level data.

## Key findings

- Massachusetts had the highest 65+ depression rate (54.46%), while New Hampshire had the lowest (20.01%).
- High depression clusters in Connecticut and Massachusetts were in urban areas, whereas in Maine and New Hampshire they were in rural areas.
- Some neighborhoods in Massachusetts reported depression rates over 50% among the elderly.

## Abstract

Rural residents report higher depression rates than their urban counterparts. The present descriptive study will compare community and neighborhood-level 65+ “ever-diagnosed” depression rates in five New England states: Connecticut (CT), Massachusetts (MA), Maine (ME), New Hampshire (NH), and Rhode Island (RI). The Healthy Aging Data Reports (HADRs) (www.healthyagingdatareports.org) are a comprehensive tool to spur community and policy action as they calculate community-level prevalence of 38 chronic diseases for each community in a state. Using Medicare Beneficiary Summary File (2020-2021), representing 100% of traditional beneficiaries. Small area estimation techniques were used to calculate age-sex adjusted community depression rates and over 150 other health indicators. Results varied across states with NH reporting the lowest community rate of 65+ depression in the sample (20.01%) and MA reporting the highest (54.46%). CT and MA reported the largest range in 65+ depression (CT:23.68-42.65%; MA:21.90-54.46%) with the highest rate clusters located near the biggest cities, in urban areas (CT:25.62-42.65%; MA:26.39-54.46%). Conversely, in ME and NH, the highest rate clusters were found in rural areas (NH:29.60-38.08%; ME:36.99-43.40%), states with a more traditional rural/urban threshold compared to the population dense states of CT, MA, and RI. In sum, the 2025 HADRs identified geographic disparities and overall high rate of 65+ community-level depression, with some communities reporting 65+ depression rates higher than 50% (neighborhoods in Springfield & Worcester, MA). The 2025 HADRs provide visualizations to make disparities evident; in this way, they can guide policy efforts to treat and address the growing mental health needs of the aging population.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MONDO:0002050)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761327