Depression and Higher Body Temperatures May Be Linked: Study

Heat interventions to induce the body’s self-cooling mechanism may offer solutions for depressive symptoms.
Depression and Higher Body Temperatures May Be Linked: Study
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A new treatment approach could be on the way for depression thanks to a University of California (UC)–San Francisco research team’s discovery of the link between depression and high body temperatures.

The study was published in Scientific Reports and shows that depressive symptoms correlate with higher body temperatures.
A.C. Dahnke
A.C. Dahnke
Author
A.C. Dahnke is a freelance writer and editor residing in California. She has covered community journalism and health care news for nearly a decade, winning a California Newspaper Publishers Award for her work.
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