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Home / Health Conditions / Depression / Is There A Higher Risk For Depression During the Winter Months?

Is There A Higher Risk For Depression During the Winter Months?

Another 10 to 20 percent may have mild SAD, Hafeez added. SAD is four times more common in women than in men, and it’s more prevalent the farther north you go. For example, it’s seven times more common in Washington state than in Florida, she said.

Light therapy and antidepressants can help patients with SAD, Hafeez said.

“In most cases, seasonal affective disorder symptoms appear during late fall or early winter and go away during the sunnier days of spring and summer,” Hafeez said.

But new research indicates that more serious cases of depression also surface right after the time change.winter depression

In the study, researchers analyzed 1995-2012 data from Denmark and found that the number of people diagnosed with depression at psychiatric hospitals increased immediately after the switch from daylight saving time to standard time.

The number of depression diagnoses in the month after the time change was about 8 percent higher than normal, according to the study published recently in the journal Epidemiology.

That increase is too high to be coincidental, the researchers added. “We are relatively certain that it is the transition from daylight saving time to standard time that causes the increase in the number of depression diagnoses,” said study author Soren Ostergaard, from Aarhus University in Denmark.

The researchers did not pinpoint the reasons for the increase in depression diagnoses after the time change, but they suggested some possible causes.

“We probably benefit less from the daylight in the morning between 7 and 8, because many of us are either in the shower, eating breakfast or sitting in a car or bus on the way to work or school. When we get home and have spare time in the afternoon, it is already dark,” Ostergaard said in a university news release.

“Furthermore, the transition to standard time is likely to be associated with a negative psychological effect as it very clearly marks the coming of a period of long, dark and cold days,” he added.

“Our results should give rise to increased awareness of depression in the weeks following the transition to standard time. This is especially true for people with a tendency towards depression,” Ostergaard said.

 

November 4, 2016 by Robert Preidt

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