Seasonal Affective Disorder - Part 1

in depression •  7 years ago  (edited)

SAD aka Winter Depression is a surprisingly common condition
affecting majority of the population often undiagnosed.

The high number of SAD patients in Kerala
which has a tropical climate is quite surprising.
SAD is highly prevalent in areas where there is
extended winter season like in Nordic countries.

It seems SAD mostly affects south Indians from Nov to Feb.
But Winter is mild and Sunlight intensity is not as low as in Temperate zone.

So, why SAD is so prevalent in South India?
I started digging deep and formulating my own hypothesis.

I googled and looked at yearly sun graph for kerala.
As i expected daylight duration is low from Nov to Feb.
So i know daylight duration is more important than intensity.
It's pretty much like photoperiodism in plants.

Screenshot (48).png

Many questions came to my mind.
How such a trait evolved in population?
What evolutionary advantage it brings?

SAD is an evolutionary remnant of Hibernation.
Ice age moulded the evolution of humanity in many ways.
In frigid conditions, food is scarce and risk of death is higher
if the animal freely roams around.
So a depressed animal has survival advantage over freely roaming one in winter.
That might be the evolutionary pressure that lead to development of SAD in modern men.

1200-608513-facts-about-bear-hibernation.jpg

to be continued...

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

I am also from Thrissur :)

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Hi... great :-) where in thrissur

Near Cheruthuruthy. Are you in discord? Or do you mind connecting with me via steemchat ?

yeah... i will connect with u... i'm new to steem. i'm more familiar with it's brother bitshares. lemme learn to use steem chat and i will connect with u :-)

Above observations are interesting. So in theory this SAD will slowly subside with time, as it is not necessary now, right ?

yes... i hope so :-)