Is there seasonality in hospitalizations for major depressive disorder in Canada?

Authors

  • AISWARYA PILLAI University of Ottawa; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
  • LUCIE RICHARD Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
  • SALIMAH Z. SHARIFF Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
  • AKSHYA VASUDEV Western University; Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/0101-60830000000137

Keywords:

MDD, depression, seasonality, Canada, ICES

Abstract

Background Canada, a temperate country with four defined seasons incurs an annual productivity loss of over $30 billion on major depressive disorder (MDD); however it remains unknown whether inpatient hospitalization for MDD exhibits seasonal variations. Objective Our study objective was to determine if there are seasonal variations in hospitalization rates for MDD in Canada. Methods We used time series analysis to determine monthly rates of hospitalizations for MDD from 2006 – 2013, on data from population level health-administrative databases in Ontario, Canada. We also stratified analysis by gender and three age groups: 18 to 39, 40 to 65 and those over 65. We compared demographic and comorbidity profiles of patients admitted in April, August and December to elucidate if patient characteristics differed by season of admission. Results We identified a total of 130,336 admissions for MDD for 95,439 unique patients. Baseline characteristics of the patients were similar across seasons. We did not detect significant seasonality of hospitalizations for MDD across any of the gender or age subgroups. Discussion Our results question the popularly held belief that hospitalizations for MDD vary with seasons. These findings highlight the need for uniform hospital resource allocation for MDD throughout the year in Canada.

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Published

2017-10-01

Issue

Section

Brief Report

How to Cite

Is there seasonality in hospitalizations for major depressive disorder in Canada?. (2017). Archives of Clinical Psychiatry, 44(5), 134-136. https://doi.org/10.1590/0101-60830000000137