Why Suicide Rates Spike in the Spring
By SASS-MoKAN (Bonnie Swade)
With the sun shining
brightly, temperatures starting to warm ,
and the onset of longer days one would think everyone is happy
with the promise of new life in the spring.
Unfortunately, research shows that suicide rates tend to escalate.
According to an article
that appeared in the Mental Health Magazine that is not the
case. Some of the reasons are seasonal
affective disorder, summertime depression in women related to melatonin
production, and social influences.
Seasonal affective
disorder is one reason. Even if the
temperatures are warming and the days brighter for some that is not enough to
lift the blues. Seeing others around
having a good time when you aren’t is sad according to Dr. Michael Riba an
associate director of the University of Michigan Comprehensive Depression
Center.
Summertime depression
happens with the onset of spring and there are some theories related to the
amounts of melatonin produced in women but doctors are not completely sure of
this.
Another reason may be
social. This time of the year people go on vacations and some groups disband
for the season according to Riba so there may be less structure and support in
place. Watching people enjoy the season
with their families and friends may cause some jealousy and envy. If one is
experiencing challenges and struggles in their life it’s hard to feel happy.
Financial concerns or a break up with a significant other may also be a
factor.
Given these factors it
is not surprising that suicide rates rise.
Suicide rates spike in the spring and to a lesser extent in the fall,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, not around the
holidays as everyone suspects. And in fact, suicides in general have increased
24 percent between 1999 and 2014, according to a CDC report released in April. The uptick begins in early April and late May. Why? The seasonal
brightness may actually have something to do with that: In a recent op-ed
in The Washington Post Harvard professor of
psychology Matthew Nock cited a 2014 study published in JAMA Psychiatry that
found that as hours of sunlight increased, so did the risk of suicide.
"The authors speculate that sunlight could boost energy and motivation,
thus giving people who are depressed the ability to take action and make a
suicide attempt," he wrote. Some researchers are looking at suicide rates
at times of high-pollen counts compared with less pollen, theorizing that the
increase might be due to increased anxiety or aggression related to
inflammation.
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