“…Older Mexican Americans (25%) residing in the Southwestern United States are more likely to report depressive symptoms than other Hispanics (10.8%), non-Hispanic Blacks (8.9%), and non-Hispanic Whites (7.8%) at the national level (Black, Goodwin, & Markides, 1998;Dunlop, Song, Lyons, Manheim, & Chang, 2003). Lower mortality among older Mexican Americans (particularly the foreign-born) vis-à-vis non-Hispanic Whites, accompanied by a disproportionate burden of chronic disease, disability, and cognitive impairment suggests this population is at a greater risk of spending more years of late-life with depression (Fenelon, Chinn, & Anderson, 2017;Garcia, Garcia, & Ailshire, 2018;Garcia, Garcia, Chiu, Raji, & Markides, 2018;Hayward, Hummer, Chiu, González-González, & Wong, 2014), which has serious policy implications for quality of life, caregiver burden, and health care utilization among this rapidly growing population.…”