People born
in spring or early summer in the northern hemisphere
have a 17 percent increased risk of committing suicide
than those with birthdays in the autumn or early
winter, researchers said.
They found that women born in April, May and
June were 29.6 percent more likely to take their
own lives while men had a 13.7 increased risk.
"Our results support the hypotheses that there
is a seasonal effect in the monthly birth rates
of people who kill themselves and that there is
a disproportionate excess of such people born
between late spring and midsummer compared with
the other months," Dr Emad Salib, of Liverpool
University, northwest England, said in a report
in the British Journal of Cancer.
Salib and Mario Cortina-Borja, of University
College London, analyzed data on 26,915 suicides
and deaths from undetermined injuries in England
and Wales between 1979 and 2001. All of the people
involved had been born between 1955 and 1966.
They said seasonal birth trends for illnesses
including breast and testicular cancer, coronary
heart disease, brain tumors, Crohn's disease and
early onset non-Hodgkin's lymphoma had been established.
Their findings are in line with reported higher
birth rates in the spring and early summer of
people suffering from alcoholism and mood disorders
whose suicide deaths are about 10 percent of the
annual total in England and Wales.
But Salib said the findings are not consistent
with research showing schizophrenia, which is
also linked to suicide risk, is associated with
winter births.
The researchers suggest exposure of the fetus
to factors such as maternal diet, infections,
toxins, the amount of sunlight and hormones could
trigger physical and psychiatric disorders, including
suicide, in adulthood.
Salib hopes the findings will improve understanding
about suicide and the ability to predict people
more at risk.