Climate change is already having an impact on the mental health of people in the UK, with extreme weather events and rising anxiety about the future particularly harming vulnerable groups, according to a report from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA).
The research highlights the mental health effects of flooding, heat and other extreme weather, which are expected to worsen as the climate warms.
Farming and rural communities, people with pre-existing health conditions and young people are most at risk, according to the UKHSA’s Climate change and mental health report.
The UKHSA said the situation was also particularly impacting vulnerable populations who find it ‘increasingly difficult’ to access transport and healthcare services in extreme conditions.
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It also suggested that an ‘overarching awareness’ of climate change was negatively impacting people’s mental health and contributing to ‘eco-anxiety’.
‘Awareness that the climate is changing can lead to feelings of sadness, fear, anger, worry, low mood, sleep disorders, panic attacks and helplessness,’ the report said.
‘These can even impact individuals who have not directly experienced a climate-related event themselves, as well as those who have experienced such events.’
The agency has set out evidence that targeted psychological support – including cognitive behavioural therapy and mobile mental health interventions – can help reduce symptoms such as anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder in relation to climate change.
It calls for more ongoing support after extreme weather events, and greater investment in preventative and resilience-building measures.
Professor Robin May, chief scientific officer at UKHSA, said the report marked an ‘important step forward’ in understanding how climate change is affecting health in the UK and what can be done in response.
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Meanwhile, Professor Lea Berrang Ford, head of the UKHSA Centre for Climate and Health Security (CCHS), said: ‘Climate change is already impacting mental health, and these risks will increase as the climate warms and extreme weather events become more frequent and severe.
‘Climate warming will exacerbate mental health inequalities, with impacts greatest on rural and agricultural communities and young people.
‘There are practical and effective steps government and social care organisations can take to ensure adequate protection and support.’
The report draws on UK studies, 130 reviews that included data from OECD countries detailing the pathways in which mental health can impact climate change and UK-based case studies demonstrating interventions for mental health in response to climate change.
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Seven overarching themes emerged, according to the report:
Climate change is impacting mental health and wellbeing
Climate change impacts the social and economic determinants of mental health and wellbeing.
Some occupational populations are at heightened risk from the mental health and wellbeing impacts of climate change.
Children and young people are at heightened risk from the mental health and wellbeing impacts of climate change.
Those with pre-existing health difficulties are at heightened risk from the mental health impacts of climate change.
Impacts on mental health and wellbeing from climate change can be long-lasting.
Protective pathways can help to minimise or buffer mental health and wellbeing impacts from climate change.