Are you feeling Seasonal Affective Disorder? Blame it on the rains
Thirty four-year-old Mumbai yoga instructor Pallavi Acharya, for instance, finds it hard to get out of bed these days. "The grayness, gloominess and rains make me feel low during the monsoons. When you open the papers and read about diseases such as leptospirosis, dengue and malaria, it gets you down," she said.
Mental health charities in Mumbai record an 80 per cent increase in calls to helplines during the rains. Some callers are clinically depressed, but there are also large numbers of previously happy people who just feel low because of the weather.
"From September to June we get around five calls a day but during the monsoon it is 15-18," said Johnson Thomas, director of Aasra, a mental health NGO. Dr Rajesh Sagar, psychiatrist, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, said there should be two episodes of depression in consecutive months to classify it as SAD. "It is not commonly diagnosed in Delhi. It is more prevalent in European countries." However, one of the world's leading SAD ex perts told Hindustan Times that seasonal depression also occurs in tropical coun tries during the monsoon months.
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Labels: dengue, helplines, malaria, Mental health charities, Monsoon, Mumbai, Mumbai yoga instructor Pallavi Acharya, rainfall, SAD, weather, Yoga
