Main Navigation
 
Search
Advanced Search>>
Free Newsletter
Subscribe
Unsubscribe
 
 


Health Headlines

Get the latest news in prevention and health matters. This feature includes daily postings and recent archives to keep you up to date on health reports and wires around the world.
Weekly Wellness
Get informed with weekly wellness facts in a diversity of health topics from prevention to fitness and nutrition.
Tips
Great tips on what you need to know about keeping healthy and active all year round.

 
Birth Season, Schizophrenia Type Linked

Schizophrenics born during the summer in the Northern Hemisphere tend to develop a more severe form of the mental illness than those born during the winter, a study said.

An analysis of nearly 1,600 people with schizophrenia from six countries in that hemisphere found an association between June and July births and cases of "deficit" schizophrenia, which is characterized by an inability to experience pleasure, antisocial behavior and blunted speech.

Symptoms of this type of schizophrenia tend to worsen more quickly and become more severe.

Winter births were associated with non-deficit schizophrenia, which is characterized by hallucinations and incoherent and delusional thinking.

"Seasonal variations in infectious agents, sunlight exposure and vitamin D, and the availability of nutrients have been proposed as possible explanations for the seasonality of births in schizophrenia. "However, to date, no specific agent has been identified," wrote study author Erick Messias of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore in The Archives of General Psychiatry.

Schizophrenia affects roughly 1 percent of the world's population. The disease usually shows up between the ages of 15 and 25.

Reference Source 89
October 5, 2004


For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick Prevention Resources".

 
Select a Channel