Ramadan Abdullah Mohammed Hassan, Ataallah Ahmed G
Department of Psychiatry, Mansoura University Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura, Egypt.
Gen Psychiatr. 2021 Nov 9;34(6):e100648. doi: 10.1136/gpsych-2021-100648. eCollection 2021.
Climate change is one of the biggest challenges of our time and is likely to affect human beings in substantial ways. Recently, researchers started paying more attention to the changes in climate and their subsequent impact on the social, environmental and economic determinants of health, and the role they play in causing or exacerbating mental health problems. The effects of climate change-related events on mental well-being could be classified into direct and indirect effects. The direct effects of climate change mostly occur after acute weather events and include post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, substance abuse disorder, depression and even suicidal ideation. The indirect effects include economic losses, displacement and forced migration, competition over scarce resources and collective violence. The risk factors for developing those mental health issues include young age, female gender, low socioeconomic status, loss or injury of a loved one, being a member of immigrant groups or indigenous people, pre-existing mental illness and inadequate social support. However, in some individuals, especially those undisturbed by any directly observable effects of climate change, abstract awareness and acknowledgement of the ongoing climate crisis can induce negative emotions that can be intense enough to cause mental health illness. Coping strategies should be provided to the affected communities to protect their mental health from collapse in the face of climate disasters. Awareness of the mental health impacts of climate change should be raised, especially in the high-risk groups. Social and global attention to the climate crisis and its detrimental effects on mental health are crucial. This paper was written with the aim of trying to understand the currently, scientifically proven impact of climate change-related disasters on mental health and understanding the different methods of solving the problem at the corporate level, by trying to decrease greenhouse gas emissions to zero, and at the individual level by learning how to cope with the impacts of those disasters.
气候变化是我们这个时代最大的挑战之一,很可能会对人类产生重大影响。最近,研究人员开始更加关注气候变化及其对健康的社会、环境和经济决定因素的后续影响,以及它们在引发或加剧心理健康问题中所起的作用。与气候变化相关的事件对心理健康的影响可分为直接影响和间接影响。气候变化的直接影响大多发生在极端天气事件之后,包括创伤后应激障碍、焦虑、物质滥用障碍、抑郁甚至自杀念头。间接影响包括经济损失、流离失所和被迫迁移、对稀缺资源的竞争以及集体暴力。出现这些心理健康问题的风险因素包括年龄小、女性、社会经济地位低、失去亲人或亲人受伤、是移民群体或原住民群体的成员、先前存在的精神疾病以及社会支持不足。然而,在一些人身上,尤其是那些未受到气候变化任何直接可观察到的影响的人,对持续的气候危机的抽象认知和承认会引发负面情绪,其强烈程度足以导致心理健康疾病。应该向受影响的社区提供应对策略,以保护他们的心理健康在面对气候灾难时不至于崩溃。应该提高对气候变化对心理健康影响的认识,尤其是在高风险群体中。社会和全球对气候危机及其对心理健康的有害影响的关注至关重要。本文旨在试图了解目前科学证明的与气候变化相关的灾难对心理健康的影响,并了解在企业层面通过努力将温室气体排放降至零以及在个人层面通过学习如何应对这些灾难的影响来解决问题的不同方法。