People can die because they've simply 'given up on life'

‘Give-up-itis’ is a real and potentially fatal condition, according to research (Getty)
‘Give-up-itis’ is a real and potentially fatal condition, according to research (Getty)

‘Give-up-itis’ is a real and potentially fatal condition which sees people simply tire of life, according to research.

John Leach, a senior research fellow at the University of Portsmouth, said the genuine medical condition occurs when people simply give up on life.

Leach said the condition usually occurs when a person has suffered a trauma and believed there was no escape, with death being the “only rational outcome”.

He said if the condition was not overcome then death normally occurred three weeks after the first stage of withdrawal.

Dr Leach said: “Psychogenic death is real. It isn’t suicide, it isn’t linked to depression, but the act of giving up on life and dying, usually within days, is a very real condition often linked to severe trauma.”

The condition occurs after trauma, says senior researcher John Leach (Getty)
The condition occurs after trauma, says senior researcher John Leach (Getty)

He added that his study, published in Medical Hypotheses, suggested that give-up-itis could stem from a change in a frontal-subcortical circuit of the brain governing how a person maintains goal-directed behaviour.

He said: “Severe trauma might trigger some people’s anterior cingulate circuit to malfunction. Motivation is essential for coping with life and if that fails, apathy is almost inevitable.”

Dr Leach said the most common interventions were physical activity and/or a person being able to see a situation was at least partially within their control, both of which trigger the release of the feelgood chemical dopamine.

He said: “Reversing the give-up-itis slide towards death tends to come when a survivor finds or recovers a sense of choice, of having some control, and tends to be accompanied by that person licking

their wounds and taking a renewed interest in life.”

Dr Leach said the stages of give-up-itis were social withdrawal, apathy, lack of motivation, lack of pain response and psychogenic death, which he described as “disintegration of the person”.