LAUSR.org creates dashboard-style pages of related content for over 1.5 million academic articles. Sign Up to like articles & get recommendations!

Relationship between photoperiod and hospital admissions for mania in New South Wales, Australia.

Photo by rossfindon from unsplash

BACKGROUND Causes for a seasonal impact on admissions for mania remain to be clarified. We examined the impact of photoperiod, rate of change of photoperiod and hours of sunshine on… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Causes for a seasonal impact on admissions for mania remain to be clarified. We examined the impact of photoperiod, rate of change of photoperiod and hours of sunshine on admissions over an extended period. METHODS Monthly admission data to NSW psychiatric hospitals for more than twenty thousand patients admitted for mania over a fifteen-year period were correlated with photoperiod and sunshine changes. RESULTS While the peak in admissions occurred in spring, the shift in admissions being under-represented to being precipitously over-represented corresponded with the photoperiod commencing to increase in winter (i.e. July). Analyses identified rate of change in photoperiod as somewhat more influential than change in photoperiod and with hours of sunshine not making a distinctive contribution. Immediate and delayed impacts of rate of change as well as change in photoperiod across the whole year accounted for a distinctive 20% of the variance in hospital admissions. LIMITATIONS Validity of mania diagnoses cannot be established from the data set, admission data were obtained from across the state while meteorological data were obtained from the capital city, lag periods between onset of a mania and hospitalization (while identified) would impact on associations, social factors were not included and study associations do not imply causality. CONCLUSIONS The lack of a strong year-long correlation may reflect photoperiod changes being only a weak causal factor or that its influence may be through a strong impact phase after the winter solstice and with the spring peaking of admissions reflecting secondary photoperiod or other influences.

Keywords: photoperiod; admissions mania; change; change photoperiod; hospital admissions

Journal Title: Journal of affective disorders
Year Published: 2018

Link to full text (if available)


Share on Social Media:                               Sign Up to like & get
recommendations!

Related content

More Information              News              Social Media              Video              Recommended



                Click one of the above tabs to view related content.