Pinchoff Jessie, Etetim Eno-Obong, Babatunde Damilola, Blomstrom Eleanor, Ainul Sigma, Akomolafe Toyin Olamide, Medina Carranza Brian, Del Valle Angel, Austrian Karen
International Development, American Institutes for Research, Arlington, Virginia, USA
Independent Consultant, Utako, Nigeria.
BMJ Glob Health. 2025 Jan 23;10(1):e016788. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2024-016788.
Climate change is shaping adolescent and young people's (AYP) transitions to adulthood with significant and often compounding effects on their physical and mental health. The climate crisis is an intergenerational inequity, with the current generation of young people exposed to more climate events over their lifetime than any previous one. Despite this injustice, research and policy to date lacks AYP's perspectives and active engagement.
Participatory, youth co-led qualitative focus group discussions were held in Bangladesh, Guatemala and Nigeria in mid-2023. A total of 196 AYP ages 12-25 years participated. Open-ended questions elicited responses regarding AYP knowledge, experiences and perceptions of climate change. Using NVivo software, translated transcripts were coded to explore and synthesise key thematic areas.
Respondents discussed varied climate exposures and associated health risks, for example, how flooding events were impeding access to sexual and reproductive health commodities. Acute climate events like flooding and cyclones increased perceived risk of early marriage and gender-based violence in Bangladesh and Guatemala. In Nigeria, respondents discussed health effects of extreme heat, and how droughts were shifting women into more traditionally male roles in agriculture and income-generating activities, increasing the perceived risk of household tensions and gender-based violence. Commonly reported themes included perceived climate impacts on sexual and reproductive health including early marriage or gender-based violence. Another common theme was anxiety about climate change, its effects on economic and food insecurity in communities and feeling hopeless, lacking agency and not feeling supported by local institutions, all linked with worse mental health.
Our results summarise how AYP perceive climate change is affecting their physical and mental health, finding similarities and differences across these three settings. Our results can inform the development of policies and programmes that directly address AYP needs in a way that is inclusive and responsive.
气候变化正在塑造青少年向成年期的过渡,对他们的身心健康产生重大且往往是复合的影响。气候危机是一种代际不平等现象,与以往任何一代人相比,当代年轻人一生中面临的气候事件更多。尽管存在这种不公,但迄今为止的研究和政策缺乏青少年的视角和积极参与。
2023年年中,在孟加拉国、危地马拉和尼日利亚举行了由青年共同主导的参与式定性焦点小组讨论。共有196名年龄在12至25岁之间的青少年参与。开放式问题引发了关于青少年对气候变化的知识、经历和看法的回应。使用NVivo软件对翻译后的记录进行编码,以探索和综合关键主题领域。
受访者讨论了各种气候暴露情况及相关的健康风险,例如,洪水事件如何阻碍获得性健康和生殖健康用品。在孟加拉国和危地马拉,洪水和飓风等急性气候事件增加了早婚和基于性别的暴力的感知风险。在尼日利亚,受访者讨论了极端高温对健康的影响,以及干旱如何使女性在农业和创收活动中承担更多传统上由男性承担的角色,增加了家庭关系紧张和基于性别的暴力的感知风险。常见的主题包括感知到的气候对性健康和生殖健康的影响,包括早婚或基于性别的暴力。另一个常见主题是对气候变化的焦虑、其对社区经济和粮食不安全的影响,以及感到绝望、缺乏能动性且感觉未得到当地机构的支持,所有这些都与较差的心理健康状况相关。
我们的结果总结了青少年如何感知气候变化对他们身心健康的影响,发现在这三种背景下既有相似之处也有不同之处。我们的结果可为制定以包容和响应的方式直接满足青少年需求的政策和方案提供参考。