Omar J Francis, Bryan J Kopke, Anthony J Affatato, Robert W Jarski
{"title":"Psychiatric Presentations During All 4 Phases of the Lunar Cycle.","authors":"Omar J Francis, Bryan J Kopke, Anthony J Affatato, Robert W Jarski","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Context • Anecdotal evidence concerning a relationship between human illnesses and a full moon is frequently claimed by as many as 81% of mental health workers. Previous scientific investigations have studied only the full-moon phase and its possible effect on psychiatric presentations. However, information is limited about all 4 phases of the lunar cycle and their effects on different types of psychiatric disorders. Objective • This study primarily intended to evaluate the number of psychiatric presentations to a hospital's emergency department across all 4 phases of the lunar cycle. The secondary objective was to investigate the statistical differences among 5 categories of common mental disorders in relation to the 4 lunar phases. Design • This study was an observational analytic cohort study. Setting • The study took place in the emergency department of a 140-bed, community-teaching hospital. Participants • Participants were 1857 patients who were aged >17 y and who had had a psychiatric component to a visit to the emergency department. Outcome Measures • Data from electronic medical records were collected for 41 consecutive months. The participants were divided into 5 diagnostic groups based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th ed (DSM-5). The study measured the number of psychiatric presentations for each group during the 4 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)-defined phases of the lunar cycle, and the study was statistically powered to detect small effects. Results • The following psychiatric presentations occurred: (1) 464 during the new moon; (2) 483 during the first quarter; (3) 449 during the full moon; and (4) 461 during the third quarter (4-group overall χ2, P = .89). Differences between the 5 diagnostic categories across the 4 lunar phases were not statistically significant (4-group overall χ2, P = .85 for the 5 diagnostic categories). Conclusions • Although many traditional and nontraditional providers believe in effects caused by the full moon based on casual observation or anecdotal evidence, this perception was not supported in the current study. Furthermore, no evidence demonstrated increased psychiatric presentations during the other 3 phases of the lunar cycle. The study found that the lunar cycle did not have an effect on the incidence of psychiatric presentations or on the DSM-5 categories. If lunar effects exist, they are probably small or infrequent, making them difficult to validate statistically. The current study's results, in concert with those of most other studies on the subject, provide evidence that should help dismiss misconceptions about the magnitude or frequency of lunar effects on psychiatric illnesses.</p>","PeriodicalId":34899,"journal":{"name":"Advances in Mind-Body Medicine","volume":"31 3","pages":"4-7"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Advances in Mind-Body Medicine","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Medicine","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Context • Anecdotal evidence concerning a relationship between human illnesses and a full moon is frequently claimed by as many as 81% of mental health workers. Previous scientific investigations have studied only the full-moon phase and its possible effect on psychiatric presentations. However, information is limited about all 4 phases of the lunar cycle and their effects on different types of psychiatric disorders. Objective • This study primarily intended to evaluate the number of psychiatric presentations to a hospital's emergency department across all 4 phases of the lunar cycle. The secondary objective was to investigate the statistical differences among 5 categories of common mental disorders in relation to the 4 lunar phases. Design • This study was an observational analytic cohort study. Setting • The study took place in the emergency department of a 140-bed, community-teaching hospital. Participants • Participants were 1857 patients who were aged >17 y and who had had a psychiatric component to a visit to the emergency department. Outcome Measures • Data from electronic medical records were collected for 41 consecutive months. The participants were divided into 5 diagnostic groups based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th ed (DSM-5). The study measured the number of psychiatric presentations for each group during the 4 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)-defined phases of the lunar cycle, and the study was statistically powered to detect small effects. Results • The following psychiatric presentations occurred: (1) 464 during the new moon; (2) 483 during the first quarter; (3) 449 during the full moon; and (4) 461 during the third quarter (4-group overall χ2, P = .89). Differences between the 5 diagnostic categories across the 4 lunar phases were not statistically significant (4-group overall χ2, P = .85 for the 5 diagnostic categories). Conclusions • Although many traditional and nontraditional providers believe in effects caused by the full moon based on casual observation or anecdotal evidence, this perception was not supported in the current study. Furthermore, no evidence demonstrated increased psychiatric presentations during the other 3 phases of the lunar cycle. The study found that the lunar cycle did not have an effect on the incidence of psychiatric presentations or on the DSM-5 categories. If lunar effects exist, they are probably small or infrequent, making them difficult to validate statistically. The current study's results, in concert with those of most other studies on the subject, provide evidence that should help dismiss misconceptions about the magnitude or frequency of lunar effects on psychiatric illnesses.
•多达81%的精神卫生工作者经常声称有关于人类疾病与满月之间关系的轶事证据。以前的科学调查只研究了满月阶段及其对精神症状的可能影响。然而,关于月亮周期的所有四个阶段及其对不同类型精神疾病的影响的信息有限。•本研究的主要目的是评估在月相周期的所有4个阶段到医院急诊科就诊的精神病患者数量。次要目的是探讨5类常见精神障碍与4个月相之间的统计学差异。•本研究为观察性分析队列研究。•该研究在一家拥有140个床位的社区教学医院的急诊科进行。参与者•参与者为1857名年龄>17岁且就诊于急诊科的精神科患者。•连续41个月收集电子病历数据。根据《精神障碍诊断与统计手册》第5版(DSM-5),将参与者分为5个诊断组。该研究测量了在美国国家航空航天局(NASA)定义的4个月球周期阶段中,每一组的精神病患者的数量,该研究在统计学上能够检测到微小的影响。•出现以下精神症状:(1)新月期间出现464例;(2)第一季度为483人;(3)满月时为449;(4)第三季度为461例(4组总χ2, P = 0.89)。5个诊断类别在4个月相间的差异无统计学意义(4组总χ2, P = 0.85)。•尽管许多传统和非传统的提供者基于偶然的观察或轶事证据相信满月造成的影响,但目前的研究并不支持这种看法。此外,没有证据表明在月亮周期的其他三个阶段精神病症状增加。研究发现,月亮周期对精神症状的发生率或DSM-5分类没有影响。即使月球效应存在,它们也可能很小或不常见,这使得它们难以在统计上得到证实。目前的研究结果,与大多数其他关于这个主题的研究结果一致,提供了证据,应该有助于消除关于月球对精神疾病影响的程度或频率的误解。