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Inaction on climate change linked to psychological distress in youth

15 Sep 2021

By University of Bath Nearly half of global youth surveyed (45%) said climate anxiety and distress is affecting their daily lives and functioning, according to results from the largest scientific study into climate anxiety in children and young people, presented at a special event on Tuesday (14). The inaugural study, based on surveys with 10,000 children and young people (16–25) across 10 countries, found that 75% of young respondents believe “the future is frightening” – jumping to 81% of youth surveyed in Portugal and 92% in the Philippines. It found, for the first time, that climate distress and anxiety is significantly related to perceived Government inaction and associated feelings of betrayal. 58% of children and young people surveyed said governments were “betraying me and/or future generations,” while 64% said their governments are not doing enough to avoid a climate catastrophe. The study gathered data from respondents in Australia, the US, the UK, India, Nigeria, Philippines, Finland, Portugal, Brazil, and France, and was carried out by academics from a range of institutions: The University of Bath, the University of Helsinki, NYU Langone Health, University of East Anglia, Stanford Medicine Centre for Innovation in Global Health, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, The College of Wooster, and Climate Psychiatry Alliance. The study found widespread psychological distress among children and young people globally and warns “such high levels of distress, functional impact, and feelings of betrayal will negatively affect the mental health of children and young people”. Experts warn that because continued government inaction on climate change is psychologically damaging, it potentially amounts to a violation of international human rights law. The study co-lead author Caroline Hickman, from the University of Bath Climate Psychology Alliance said: “This study paints a horrific picture of widespread climate anxiety in our children and young people. It suggests for the first time that high levels of psychological distress in youth is linked to government inaction. Our children’s anxiety is a completely rational reaction given the inadequate responses to climate change they are seeing from governments. What more do governments need to hear to take action?” Co-lead author Dr. Liz Marks, from the University of Bath’s Department of Psychology said: “It's shocking to hear how so many young people from around the world feel betrayed by those who are supposed to protect them. Now is the time to face the truth, listen to young people, and take urgent action against climate change.” Mitzi Tan, 23 years old, from the Philippines, said: “I grew up being afraid of drowning in my own bedroom. Society tells me that this anxiety is an irrational fear that needs to be overcome – one that meditation and healthy coping mechanisms will ‘fix’. At its root, our climate anxiety comes from this deep-set feeling of betrayal because of government inaction. To truly address our growing climate anxiety, we need justice.” Beth Irving, a 19-year-old climate activist behind the Cardiff student climate strikes, said: “When I was 16...I went through phases of feeling utterly helpless in face of this immense problem, and then would launch myself into organising protests or changing things within my school. To put so much energy into something and then see so little real life impact was exhausting; I had many occasions where I would hide myself away and think: ‘None of this is enough.’ It’s so damaging to put this problem on the shoulders of young people—hope needs to come instead from palpable structural action.” Additional findings from the study include:
  • 59% of children and young people surveyed were very or extremely worried about climate change
  • More than half of respondents said they had felt afraid, sad, anxious, angry, powerless, helpless, and/or guilty
  • 55% of respondents felt they would have fewer opportunities than their parents
  • 65% felt governments were failing young people, while 61% said the way governments deal with climate change was not “protecting me, the planet and/or future generations”
  • Almost half (48%) of those who said they talked with others about climate change felt ignored or dismissed
  • Young people surveyed from the Global South expressed more worry and a greater impact on functioning; while young people surveyed in Portugal (which has seen dramatic increases in wildfires since 2017) showed the highest level of worry amongst those from the Global North
The study concludes that governments must respond to “protect the mental health of children and young people by engaging in ethical, collective, policy-based action against climate change”. The research comes after UNICEF released a report into the physical threat climate change poses to children, with one billion children at “extremely high risk” of the impacts of the climate crisis. (This article was first published by Phys.org on 14 September 2021)  

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