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Monday, June 30, 2008

Are you feeling Seasonal Affective Disorder? Blame it on the rains

Dark Skies and incessant rain are casting a cloud of depression over Indian cities, say scientists, terming the phenomenon as SAD -Seasonal Affective Disorder.

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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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Crop hope in early rains

The early monsoon sweeping most parts of the country have raised hopes of a bumper crop that could help Prime Minister Manmohan Singh rein in the price line.

But for the prime minister's hopes of a bumper paddy crop to come true, the monsoon has to be steady and longer. Meteorologists believe there's a good chance of that happening too.

The government has pinned hopes of bringing down the inflation rate that has touched a seven-year high of 8.75 per cent - on a good monsoon and set mid September as a realistic deadline for prices to moderate.

"Overall, indications are that it is going to be a good monsoon," said Ajit Tyagi, director general of the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD). This year, the monsoon is stronger and more widespread than previous years.

Nationwide rainfall figures till middle of last week reveal that 23 of the 36 meteorological sub-divisions have had normal or excess rainfall. The rainfall till date has been 30 per cent more than what the IMD considers normal. By this time last year, just 12 sub-divisions had excess or normal rainfall.

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