Real-time air pollution and bipolar disorder symptoms: a remote monitored cross-sectional study


Journal article


A. Kandola, J. Hayes
medRxiv, 2022

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APA   Click to copy
Kandola, A., & Hayes, J. (2022). Real-time air pollution and bipolar disorder symptoms: a remote monitored cross-sectional study. MedRxiv.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Kandola, A., and J. Hayes. “Real-Time Air Pollution and Bipolar Disorder Symptoms: a Remote Monitored Cross-Sectional Study.” medRxiv (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Kandola, A., and J. Hayes. “Real-Time Air Pollution and Bipolar Disorder Symptoms: a Remote Monitored Cross-Sectional Study.” MedRxiv, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2022a,
  title = {Real-time air pollution and bipolar disorder symptoms: a remote monitored cross-sectional study},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {medRxiv},
  author = {Kandola, A. and Hayes, J.}
}

Abstract

Air pollution is associated with unipolar depression and other mental health outcomes. We assessed the real-time association between localised mean air quality index and the severity of depression and mania symptoms in people with bipolar disorder. We found that as air quality worsened, symptoms of depression increased. We found no association between air quality and mania symptoms.


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