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The study researchers used Google's public database of questions, identifying and following mental health questions in Australia and the United States between 2006 and 2010. All questions relating to mental health were recorded and categorized by type of mental illness. The following common conditions were included:
OCD
schizophrenia
suicide
ADHD
anxiety
eating disorders
depression
bipolar
Investigators used advanced mathematical techniques to pinpoint patterns. They found that all mental health searches in both nations were higher in winter than in summer.
The findings revealed that eating disorder searches declined 37% in the summer compared to the winter in the United States, and 42% in summers in Australia. Schizophrenia searches reduced by 37% during U.S. summers and 36% during Australian summers.
With regards to bipolar searches, they declined 16% during U.S. summers, while in Australia they decreased by 17%. ADHD searches dropped by 28% in the U.S. and by 31% in Australia during summer. OCD searches decreased by 18% and 15% respectively.
Suicide searches fell by 24% and 29% during U.S.summers and 17% during the Australian summertime. Anxiety searches showed the smallest change - a reduction of 7% during the summer in the U.S and 15% in Australian summers.
Some health issues like seasonal affective disorder (SAD) are linked to seasonal weather patterns, but the links between seasons and several of the major disorders were surprising.
James Niels Rosenquist, MD, PhD, a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital, commented, "We didn't expect to find similar winter peaks and summer troughs for queries involving every specific mental illness or problem we studied, however, the results consistently showed seasonal effects across all conditions - even after adjusting for media trends."