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Seasonality of birth and psychiatric illness

“To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.”

— Ecclesiastes

The month of birth is not just relevant to one’s astrological sign. It may have medical consequences. An impressive number of published studies have found that the month and season of birth may be related to a higher risk of various medical and psychiatric disorders.

For decades, it has been reported in more than 250 studies1 that a disproportionate number of individuals with schizophrenia are born during the winter months (January/February/March in the Northern Hemisphere and July/August/September in the Southern Hemisphere). This seasonal pattern was eventually linked to the lack of sunlight during winter months and a deficiency of vitamin D, a hormone that is critical for normal brain development. Recent studies have reported that very low serum levels of vitamin D during pregnancy significantly increase the risk of schizophrenia in offspring.2

But the plot thickens. Numerous studies over the past 20 to 30 years have reported an association between month or season of birth with sundry general medical and psychiatric conditions. Even longevity has been reported to vary with season of birth, with a longer life span for people born in autumn (October to December), compared with those born in spring (April to June).3 Of note, a longer life span for an individual born in autumn has been attributed to a higher birth weight during that season compared with those born in other seasons. In addition, the shorter life span of those with spring births has been attributed to factors during fetal life that increase the susceptibility to disease later in life (after age 50).

The following studies have reported an association between month/season of birth and general medical disorders:

  • Higher rate of myopia for summer births4
  • Tenfold higher risk of respiratory syntactical virus in babies born in January compared with October, and a 2 to 3 times higher risk of hospitalization5
  • Higher rates of asthma during childhood for March and April births6
  • Lower rate of lung cancer for winter births compared with all other seasons7
  • An excess of colon and rectal cancer for people born in September, and the lowest rate for spring births8
  • Lowest diabetes risk for summer births9
  • For males: Cardiac mortality is 11% less likely for 4th-quarter births compared with 1st-quarter births. For females: Cancer mortality is lowest in 3rd-quarter vs 1st-quarter births10
  • The peak risk for both Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma is for April births compared with other months11
  • A strong trend for malignant neoplasm in males was reported for births during the 1st trimester of the year (January through April) compared with the rest of the year12
  • Higher rate of spring births among patients who have insulin-dependent diabetes13
  • Breast cancer is 5% higher for June births compared with December births14
  • Higher risk of developing an allergy later in life for those born approximately 3 months before the main allergy season.15

The above studies may imply that birth seasonality is medical destiny. However, most such reports need further replication, or may be due to chance findings in various databases. However, they are worth considering as hypothesis-generating signals.

Continue to: And now for the risk of psychiatric disorders...

 

 

And now for the risk of psychi­atric disorders and month or season of birth. Here, too, there are multiple published reports:

  • Higher social anhedonia and schizoid features among persons born in June and July16
  • Higher autism rates for children conceived in December to March compared with those conceived during summer months17
  • In contrast to the above report, the risk of autism spectrum disorders in the United Kingdom was higher for those born in summer18
  • Another study labeled seasonality of birth in autism as “fiction”!19
  • Significant spring births for persons with anxiety20
  • Highest occurrence of postpartum depression in December21
  • High prepartum depression in winter and postpartum depression in fall22
  • Lower performance IQ among spring births23
  • Disproportionate excess of births in April, May, and June for those who die by suicide24
  • Suicide by burning oneself is higher among individuals born in January compared with any other month25
  • Relative increase in March and August births among patients with anorexia26
  • Season of birth is a predictor of emotional and behavioral regulation27
  • Serotonin metabolites show a peak in spring and a trough in fall28
  • Increase of spring births in individuals with Down syndrome29
  • Excess of spring births among patients with Alzheimer’s disease.30

As with the seasonality of medical illness risk, the association of the month or season of birth with psychiatric disorders may be based on skewed samples or simply a chance finding. However, there may be some seasonal environmental factors that could increase the risk for disorders of the body or the brain/mind. The most plausible factors may be season-related fetal developmental disruptions caused by maternal infection, diet, lack of sunlight, temperature, substance use, or immune dysregulation from comorbid medical conditions during pregnancy. Some researchers have speculated that fluctuations in the availability of various fresh fruits and vegetables during certain seasons of the year may influence fetal development or increase the susceptibility to some medical disorders. This may be at the time of conception or during the 2nd trimester of pregnancy, when the brain develops.

On the other hand, those studies, published in peer-reviewed journals, may constitute a sophisticated form of “psychiatric astrology” whose credibility could be as suspect as the imaginative predictions of one’s horoscope in the daily newspaper…

To comment on this editorial or other topics of interest: henry.nasrallah@currentpsychiatry.com.

References

1. Torrey EF, Miller J, Rawlings R, et al. Seasonality of births in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: a review of the literature. Schizophr Res. 1997;28(1):1-38.
2. McGrath J, Welham J, Pemberton M. Month of birth, hemisphere of birth and schizophrenia. Br J Psychiatry. 1995;167(6):783-785.
3. Doblhammer G, Vaupel JW. Lifespan depends on month of birth. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001;98(5):2934-2939.
4. Mandel Y, Grotto I, El-Yaniv R, et al. Season of birth, natural light, and myopia. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(4):686-692.
5. Lloyd PC, May L, Hoffman D, et al. The effect of birth month on the risk of respiratory syncytial virus hospitalization in the first year of life in the United States. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2014;33(6):e135-e140.
6. Gazala E, Ron-Feldman V, Alterman M, et al. The association between birth season and future development of childhood asthma. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2006;41(12):1125-1128.
7. Hao Y, Yan L, Ke E, et al. Birth in winter can reduce the risk of lung cancer: A retrospective study of the birth season of patients with lung cancer in Beijing area, China. Chronobiol Int. 2017;34(4):511-518.
8. Francis NK, Curtis NJ, Noble E, et al. Is month of birth a risk factor for colorectal cancer? Gastroenterol Res Pract. 2017;2017:5423765. doi: 10.1155/2017/5423765.
9. Si J, Yu C, Guo Y, et al; China Kadoorie Biobank Collaborative Group. Season of birth and the risk of type 2 diabetes in adulthood: a prospective cohort study of 0.5 million Chinese adults. Diabetologia. 2017;60(5):836-842.
10. Sohn K. The influence of birth season on mortality in the United States. Am J Hum Biol. 2016;28(5):662-670.
11. Crump C, Sundquist J, Sieh W, et al. Season of birth and risk of Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Int J Cancer. 2014;135(11):2735-2739.
12. Stoupel E, Abramson E, Fenig E. Birth month of patients with malignant neoplasms: links to longevity? J Basic Clin Physiol Pharmacol. 2012;23(2):57-60.
13. Rothwell PM, Gutnikov SA, McKinney PA, et al. Seasonality of birth in children with diabetes in Europe: multicentre cohort study. European Diabetes Study Group. BMJ. 1999;319(7214):887-888.
14. Yuen J, Ekbom A, Trichopoulos D, et al. Season of birth and breast cancer risk in Sweden. Br J Cancer. 1994;70(3):564-568.
15. Aalberse RC, Nieuwenhuys EJ, Hey M, et al. ‘Horoscope effect’ not only for seasonal but also for non-seasonal allergens. Clin Exp Allergy. 1992;22(11):1003-1006.
16. Kirkpatrick B, Messias E, LaPorte D. Schizoid-like features and season of birth in a nonpatient sample. Schizophr Res. 2008;103:151-155.
17. Zerbo O, Iosif AM, Delwiche L, et al. Month of conception and risk of autism. Epidemiology. 2011;22(4):469-475.
18. Hebert KJ, Miller LL, Joinson CJ. Association of autistic spectrum disorder with season of birth and conception in a UK cohort. Autism Res. 2010;3(4):185-190.
19. Landau EC, Cicchetti DV, Klin A, et al. Season of birth in autism: a fiction revisited. J Autism Dev Disord. 1999;29(5):385-393.
20. Parker G, Neilson M. Mental disorder and season of birth--a southern hemisphere study. Br J Psychiatry. 1976;129:355-361.
21. Sit D, Seltman H, Wisner KL. Seasonal effects on depression risk and suicidal symptoms in postpartum women. Depress Anxiety. 2011;28(5):400-405.
22. Chan JE, Samaranayaka A, Paterson H. Seasonal and gestational variation in perinatal depression in a prospective cohort in New Zealand. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 2018. [Epub ahead of print]. doi: 10.1111/ajo.12912.
23. Grootendorst-van Mil NH, Steegers-Theunissen RP, Hofman A, et al. Brighter children? The association between seasonality of birth and child IQ in a population-based birth cohort. BMJ Open. 2017;7(2):e012406. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012406.
24. Salib E, Cortina-Borja M. Effect of month of birth on the risk of suicide. Br J Psychiatry. 2006;188:416-422.
25. Salib E, Cortina-Borja M. An association between month of birth and method of suicide. Int J Psychiatry Clin Pract. 2010;14(1):8-17.
26. Brewerton TD, Dansky BS, O’Neil PM, et al. Seasonal patterns of birth for subjects with bulimia nervosa, binge eating, and purging: results from the National Women’s Study. Int J Eat Disord. 2012;45(1):131-134.
27. Asano R, Tsuchiya KJ, Harada T, et al; for Hamamatsu Birth Cohort (HBC) Study Team. Season of birth predicts emotional and behavioral regulation in 18-month-old infants: Hamamatsu birth cohort for mothers and children (HBC Study). Front Public Health. 2016;4:152.
28. Luykx JJ, Bakker SC, Lentjes E, et al. Season of sampling and season of birth influence serotonin metabolite levels in human cerebrospinal fluid. PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e30497. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030497.
29. Videbech P, Nielsen J. Chromosome abnormalities and season of birth. Hum Genet. 1984;65(3):221-231.
30. Vézina H, Houde L, Charbonneau H, et al. Season of birth and Alzheimer’s disease: a population-based study in Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean/Québec (IMAGE Project). Psychol Med. 1996;26(1):143-149.

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“To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.”

— Ecclesiastes

The month of birth is not just relevant to one’s astrological sign. It may have medical consequences. An impressive number of published studies have found that the month and season of birth may be related to a higher risk of various medical and psychiatric disorders.

For decades, it has been reported in more than 250 studies1 that a disproportionate number of individuals with schizophrenia are born during the winter months (January/February/March in the Northern Hemisphere and July/August/September in the Southern Hemisphere). This seasonal pattern was eventually linked to the lack of sunlight during winter months and a deficiency of vitamin D, a hormone that is critical for normal brain development. Recent studies have reported that very low serum levels of vitamin D during pregnancy significantly increase the risk of schizophrenia in offspring.2

But the plot thickens. Numerous studies over the past 20 to 30 years have reported an association between month or season of birth with sundry general medical and psychiatric conditions. Even longevity has been reported to vary with season of birth, with a longer life span for people born in autumn (October to December), compared with those born in spring (April to June).3 Of note, a longer life span for an individual born in autumn has been attributed to a higher birth weight during that season compared with those born in other seasons. In addition, the shorter life span of those with spring births has been attributed to factors during fetal life that increase the susceptibility to disease later in life (after age 50).

The following studies have reported an association between month/season of birth and general medical disorders:

  • Higher rate of myopia for summer births4
  • Tenfold higher risk of respiratory syntactical virus in babies born in January compared with October, and a 2 to 3 times higher risk of hospitalization5
  • Higher rates of asthma during childhood for March and April births6
  • Lower rate of lung cancer for winter births compared with all other seasons7
  • An excess of colon and rectal cancer for people born in September, and the lowest rate for spring births8
  • Lowest diabetes risk for summer births9
  • For males: Cardiac mortality is 11% less likely for 4th-quarter births compared with 1st-quarter births. For females: Cancer mortality is lowest in 3rd-quarter vs 1st-quarter births10
  • The peak risk for both Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma is for April births compared with other months11
  • A strong trend for malignant neoplasm in males was reported for births during the 1st trimester of the year (January through April) compared with the rest of the year12
  • Higher rate of spring births among patients who have insulin-dependent diabetes13
  • Breast cancer is 5% higher for June births compared with December births14
  • Higher risk of developing an allergy later in life for those born approximately 3 months before the main allergy season.15

The above studies may imply that birth seasonality is medical destiny. However, most such reports need further replication, or may be due to chance findings in various databases. However, they are worth considering as hypothesis-generating signals.

Continue to: And now for the risk of psychiatric disorders...

 

 

And now for the risk of psychi­atric disorders and month or season of birth. Here, too, there are multiple published reports:

  • Higher social anhedonia and schizoid features among persons born in June and July16
  • Higher autism rates for children conceived in December to March compared with those conceived during summer months17
  • In contrast to the above report, the risk of autism spectrum disorders in the United Kingdom was higher for those born in summer18
  • Another study labeled seasonality of birth in autism as “fiction”!19
  • Significant spring births for persons with anxiety20
  • Highest occurrence of postpartum depression in December21
  • High prepartum depression in winter and postpartum depression in fall22
  • Lower performance IQ among spring births23
  • Disproportionate excess of births in April, May, and June for those who die by suicide24
  • Suicide by burning oneself is higher among individuals born in January compared with any other month25
  • Relative increase in March and August births among patients with anorexia26
  • Season of birth is a predictor of emotional and behavioral regulation27
  • Serotonin metabolites show a peak in spring and a trough in fall28
  • Increase of spring births in individuals with Down syndrome29
  • Excess of spring births among patients with Alzheimer’s disease.30

As with the seasonality of medical illness risk, the association of the month or season of birth with psychiatric disorders may be based on skewed samples or simply a chance finding. However, there may be some seasonal environmental factors that could increase the risk for disorders of the body or the brain/mind. The most plausible factors may be season-related fetal developmental disruptions caused by maternal infection, diet, lack of sunlight, temperature, substance use, or immune dysregulation from comorbid medical conditions during pregnancy. Some researchers have speculated that fluctuations in the availability of various fresh fruits and vegetables during certain seasons of the year may influence fetal development or increase the susceptibility to some medical disorders. This may be at the time of conception or during the 2nd trimester of pregnancy, when the brain develops.

On the other hand, those studies, published in peer-reviewed journals, may constitute a sophisticated form of “psychiatric astrology” whose credibility could be as suspect as the imaginative predictions of one’s horoscope in the daily newspaper…

To comment on this editorial or other topics of interest: henry.nasrallah@currentpsychiatry.com.

“To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.”

— Ecclesiastes

The month of birth is not just relevant to one’s astrological sign. It may have medical consequences. An impressive number of published studies have found that the month and season of birth may be related to a higher risk of various medical and psychiatric disorders.

For decades, it has been reported in more than 250 studies1 that a disproportionate number of individuals with schizophrenia are born during the winter months (January/February/March in the Northern Hemisphere and July/August/September in the Southern Hemisphere). This seasonal pattern was eventually linked to the lack of sunlight during winter months and a deficiency of vitamin D, a hormone that is critical for normal brain development. Recent studies have reported that very low serum levels of vitamin D during pregnancy significantly increase the risk of schizophrenia in offspring.2

But the plot thickens. Numerous studies over the past 20 to 30 years have reported an association between month or season of birth with sundry general medical and psychiatric conditions. Even longevity has been reported to vary with season of birth, with a longer life span for people born in autumn (October to December), compared with those born in spring (April to June).3 Of note, a longer life span for an individual born in autumn has been attributed to a higher birth weight during that season compared with those born in other seasons. In addition, the shorter life span of those with spring births has been attributed to factors during fetal life that increase the susceptibility to disease later in life (after age 50).

The following studies have reported an association between month/season of birth and general medical disorders:

  • Higher rate of myopia for summer births4
  • Tenfold higher risk of respiratory syntactical virus in babies born in January compared with October, and a 2 to 3 times higher risk of hospitalization5
  • Higher rates of asthma during childhood for March and April births6
  • Lower rate of lung cancer for winter births compared with all other seasons7
  • An excess of colon and rectal cancer for people born in September, and the lowest rate for spring births8
  • Lowest diabetes risk for summer births9
  • For males: Cardiac mortality is 11% less likely for 4th-quarter births compared with 1st-quarter births. For females: Cancer mortality is lowest in 3rd-quarter vs 1st-quarter births10
  • The peak risk for both Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma is for April births compared with other months11
  • A strong trend for malignant neoplasm in males was reported for births during the 1st trimester of the year (January through April) compared with the rest of the year12
  • Higher rate of spring births among patients who have insulin-dependent diabetes13
  • Breast cancer is 5% higher for June births compared with December births14
  • Higher risk of developing an allergy later in life for those born approximately 3 months before the main allergy season.15

The above studies may imply that birth seasonality is medical destiny. However, most such reports need further replication, or may be due to chance findings in various databases. However, they are worth considering as hypothesis-generating signals.

Continue to: And now for the risk of psychiatric disorders...

 

 

And now for the risk of psychi­atric disorders and month or season of birth. Here, too, there are multiple published reports:

  • Higher social anhedonia and schizoid features among persons born in June and July16
  • Higher autism rates for children conceived in December to March compared with those conceived during summer months17
  • In contrast to the above report, the risk of autism spectrum disorders in the United Kingdom was higher for those born in summer18
  • Another study labeled seasonality of birth in autism as “fiction”!19
  • Significant spring births for persons with anxiety20
  • Highest occurrence of postpartum depression in December21
  • High prepartum depression in winter and postpartum depression in fall22
  • Lower performance IQ among spring births23
  • Disproportionate excess of births in April, May, and June for those who die by suicide24
  • Suicide by burning oneself is higher among individuals born in January compared with any other month25
  • Relative increase in March and August births among patients with anorexia26
  • Season of birth is a predictor of emotional and behavioral regulation27
  • Serotonin metabolites show a peak in spring and a trough in fall28
  • Increase of spring births in individuals with Down syndrome29
  • Excess of spring births among patients with Alzheimer’s disease.30

As with the seasonality of medical illness risk, the association of the month or season of birth with psychiatric disorders may be based on skewed samples or simply a chance finding. However, there may be some seasonal environmental factors that could increase the risk for disorders of the body or the brain/mind. The most plausible factors may be season-related fetal developmental disruptions caused by maternal infection, diet, lack of sunlight, temperature, substance use, or immune dysregulation from comorbid medical conditions during pregnancy. Some researchers have speculated that fluctuations in the availability of various fresh fruits and vegetables during certain seasons of the year may influence fetal development or increase the susceptibility to some medical disorders. This may be at the time of conception or during the 2nd trimester of pregnancy, when the brain develops.

On the other hand, those studies, published in peer-reviewed journals, may constitute a sophisticated form of “psychiatric astrology” whose credibility could be as suspect as the imaginative predictions of one’s horoscope in the daily newspaper…

To comment on this editorial or other topics of interest: henry.nasrallah@currentpsychiatry.com.

References

1. Torrey EF, Miller J, Rawlings R, et al. Seasonality of births in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: a review of the literature. Schizophr Res. 1997;28(1):1-38.
2. McGrath J, Welham J, Pemberton M. Month of birth, hemisphere of birth and schizophrenia. Br J Psychiatry. 1995;167(6):783-785.
3. Doblhammer G, Vaupel JW. Lifespan depends on month of birth. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001;98(5):2934-2939.
4. Mandel Y, Grotto I, El-Yaniv R, et al. Season of birth, natural light, and myopia. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(4):686-692.
5. Lloyd PC, May L, Hoffman D, et al. The effect of birth month on the risk of respiratory syncytial virus hospitalization in the first year of life in the United States. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2014;33(6):e135-e140.
6. Gazala E, Ron-Feldman V, Alterman M, et al. The association between birth season and future development of childhood asthma. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2006;41(12):1125-1128.
7. Hao Y, Yan L, Ke E, et al. Birth in winter can reduce the risk of lung cancer: A retrospective study of the birth season of patients with lung cancer in Beijing area, China. Chronobiol Int. 2017;34(4):511-518.
8. Francis NK, Curtis NJ, Noble E, et al. Is month of birth a risk factor for colorectal cancer? Gastroenterol Res Pract. 2017;2017:5423765. doi: 10.1155/2017/5423765.
9. Si J, Yu C, Guo Y, et al; China Kadoorie Biobank Collaborative Group. Season of birth and the risk of type 2 diabetes in adulthood: a prospective cohort study of 0.5 million Chinese adults. Diabetologia. 2017;60(5):836-842.
10. Sohn K. The influence of birth season on mortality in the United States. Am J Hum Biol. 2016;28(5):662-670.
11. Crump C, Sundquist J, Sieh W, et al. Season of birth and risk of Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Int J Cancer. 2014;135(11):2735-2739.
12. Stoupel E, Abramson E, Fenig E. Birth month of patients with malignant neoplasms: links to longevity? J Basic Clin Physiol Pharmacol. 2012;23(2):57-60.
13. Rothwell PM, Gutnikov SA, McKinney PA, et al. Seasonality of birth in children with diabetes in Europe: multicentre cohort study. European Diabetes Study Group. BMJ. 1999;319(7214):887-888.
14. Yuen J, Ekbom A, Trichopoulos D, et al. Season of birth and breast cancer risk in Sweden. Br J Cancer. 1994;70(3):564-568.
15. Aalberse RC, Nieuwenhuys EJ, Hey M, et al. ‘Horoscope effect’ not only for seasonal but also for non-seasonal allergens. Clin Exp Allergy. 1992;22(11):1003-1006.
16. Kirkpatrick B, Messias E, LaPorte D. Schizoid-like features and season of birth in a nonpatient sample. Schizophr Res. 2008;103:151-155.
17. Zerbo O, Iosif AM, Delwiche L, et al. Month of conception and risk of autism. Epidemiology. 2011;22(4):469-475.
18. Hebert KJ, Miller LL, Joinson CJ. Association of autistic spectrum disorder with season of birth and conception in a UK cohort. Autism Res. 2010;3(4):185-190.
19. Landau EC, Cicchetti DV, Klin A, et al. Season of birth in autism: a fiction revisited. J Autism Dev Disord. 1999;29(5):385-393.
20. Parker G, Neilson M. Mental disorder and season of birth--a southern hemisphere study. Br J Psychiatry. 1976;129:355-361.
21. Sit D, Seltman H, Wisner KL. Seasonal effects on depression risk and suicidal symptoms in postpartum women. Depress Anxiety. 2011;28(5):400-405.
22. Chan JE, Samaranayaka A, Paterson H. Seasonal and gestational variation in perinatal depression in a prospective cohort in New Zealand. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 2018. [Epub ahead of print]. doi: 10.1111/ajo.12912.
23. Grootendorst-van Mil NH, Steegers-Theunissen RP, Hofman A, et al. Brighter children? The association between seasonality of birth and child IQ in a population-based birth cohort. BMJ Open. 2017;7(2):e012406. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012406.
24. Salib E, Cortina-Borja M. Effect of month of birth on the risk of suicide. Br J Psychiatry. 2006;188:416-422.
25. Salib E, Cortina-Borja M. An association between month of birth and method of suicide. Int J Psychiatry Clin Pract. 2010;14(1):8-17.
26. Brewerton TD, Dansky BS, O’Neil PM, et al. Seasonal patterns of birth for subjects with bulimia nervosa, binge eating, and purging: results from the National Women’s Study. Int J Eat Disord. 2012;45(1):131-134.
27. Asano R, Tsuchiya KJ, Harada T, et al; for Hamamatsu Birth Cohort (HBC) Study Team. Season of birth predicts emotional and behavioral regulation in 18-month-old infants: Hamamatsu birth cohort for mothers and children (HBC Study). Front Public Health. 2016;4:152.
28. Luykx JJ, Bakker SC, Lentjes E, et al. Season of sampling and season of birth influence serotonin metabolite levels in human cerebrospinal fluid. PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e30497. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030497.
29. Videbech P, Nielsen J. Chromosome abnormalities and season of birth. Hum Genet. 1984;65(3):221-231.
30. Vézina H, Houde L, Charbonneau H, et al. Season of birth and Alzheimer’s disease: a population-based study in Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean/Québec (IMAGE Project). Psychol Med. 1996;26(1):143-149.

References

1. Torrey EF, Miller J, Rawlings R, et al. Seasonality of births in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder: a review of the literature. Schizophr Res. 1997;28(1):1-38.
2. McGrath J, Welham J, Pemberton M. Month of birth, hemisphere of birth and schizophrenia. Br J Psychiatry. 1995;167(6):783-785.
3. Doblhammer G, Vaupel JW. Lifespan depends on month of birth. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001;98(5):2934-2939.
4. Mandel Y, Grotto I, El-Yaniv R, et al. Season of birth, natural light, and myopia. Ophthalmology. 2008;115(4):686-692.
5. Lloyd PC, May L, Hoffman D, et al. The effect of birth month on the risk of respiratory syncytial virus hospitalization in the first year of life in the United States. Pediatr Infect Dis J. 2014;33(6):e135-e140.
6. Gazala E, Ron-Feldman V, Alterman M, et al. The association between birth season and future development of childhood asthma. Pediatr Pulmonol. 2006;41(12):1125-1128.
7. Hao Y, Yan L, Ke E, et al. Birth in winter can reduce the risk of lung cancer: A retrospective study of the birth season of patients with lung cancer in Beijing area, China. Chronobiol Int. 2017;34(4):511-518.
8. Francis NK, Curtis NJ, Noble E, et al. Is month of birth a risk factor for colorectal cancer? Gastroenterol Res Pract. 2017;2017:5423765. doi: 10.1155/2017/5423765.
9. Si J, Yu C, Guo Y, et al; China Kadoorie Biobank Collaborative Group. Season of birth and the risk of type 2 diabetes in adulthood: a prospective cohort study of 0.5 million Chinese adults. Diabetologia. 2017;60(5):836-842.
10. Sohn K. The influence of birth season on mortality in the United States. Am J Hum Biol. 2016;28(5):662-670.
11. Crump C, Sundquist J, Sieh W, et al. Season of birth and risk of Hodgkin and non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Int J Cancer. 2014;135(11):2735-2739.
12. Stoupel E, Abramson E, Fenig E. Birth month of patients with malignant neoplasms: links to longevity? J Basic Clin Physiol Pharmacol. 2012;23(2):57-60.
13. Rothwell PM, Gutnikov SA, McKinney PA, et al. Seasonality of birth in children with diabetes in Europe: multicentre cohort study. European Diabetes Study Group. BMJ. 1999;319(7214):887-888.
14. Yuen J, Ekbom A, Trichopoulos D, et al. Season of birth and breast cancer risk in Sweden. Br J Cancer. 1994;70(3):564-568.
15. Aalberse RC, Nieuwenhuys EJ, Hey M, et al. ‘Horoscope effect’ not only for seasonal but also for non-seasonal allergens. Clin Exp Allergy. 1992;22(11):1003-1006.
16. Kirkpatrick B, Messias E, LaPorte D. Schizoid-like features and season of birth in a nonpatient sample. Schizophr Res. 2008;103:151-155.
17. Zerbo O, Iosif AM, Delwiche L, et al. Month of conception and risk of autism. Epidemiology. 2011;22(4):469-475.
18. Hebert KJ, Miller LL, Joinson CJ. Association of autistic spectrum disorder with season of birth and conception in a UK cohort. Autism Res. 2010;3(4):185-190.
19. Landau EC, Cicchetti DV, Klin A, et al. Season of birth in autism: a fiction revisited. J Autism Dev Disord. 1999;29(5):385-393.
20. Parker G, Neilson M. Mental disorder and season of birth--a southern hemisphere study. Br J Psychiatry. 1976;129:355-361.
21. Sit D, Seltman H, Wisner KL. Seasonal effects on depression risk and suicidal symptoms in postpartum women. Depress Anxiety. 2011;28(5):400-405.
22. Chan JE, Samaranayaka A, Paterson H. Seasonal and gestational variation in perinatal depression in a prospective cohort in New Zealand. Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol. 2018. [Epub ahead of print]. doi: 10.1111/ajo.12912.
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Current Psychiatry - 18(1)
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Current Psychiatry - 18(1)
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Seasonality of birth and psychiatric illness
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