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Climate change

Theme leaders: Rachel Williamson and Jura Augustinavicius

Please contact the theme leaders if you would like to initiate new projects or have other ideas about global collaboration related to this topic. You can also directly submit your project proposal here.
 
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The climate crisis represents a unique and far-reaching type of stressor that is adversely affecting population mental health and wellbeing. The impacts of climate change are related to collective problems that are experienced unequally, such as insufficient political will and harmful policies, increased disaster exposure, poverty, violence, the erosion of important places and landscapes, and harms to human physical health and the health of ecosystems.

 

Working with populations most impacted by the climate crisis, research is needed to better understand and assess mental health and wellbeing in the context of the climate crisis and to identify and test appropriate assessment and intervention strategies.


Projects under this theme aim to:

1. Provide conceptual clarity to the varied psychological responses to climate change,

2. Develop methods of assessing mental health and wellbeing in the context of climate change,

3. Develop appropriate intervention strategies with communities most impacted by climate change

Joining the climate change network

 

Project group

The network is open to researchers and clinicians with an interest/expertise in the intersection of climate change and mental health. We are particularly interested in expanding the network to include members from underrepresented (i.e., non-Western) geographical areas. Project suggestions and collaborators welcome!

Current network members

Rachel Williamson (PI), University of Montana, USA

Jura Augustinavicius, McGill University, Canada

Phoebe Bean, University of Montana, USA

Gary Belkin, Harvard, USA

Helen Berry, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Australia

Fiona Charlson, University of Queensland, Australia

Susan Clayton, Wooster College, USA

Hannah Comtesse, Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, Germany

Ashlee Cunsolo, Memorial University, Canada

Christy Denckla, Harvard, USMichel Dückers, ARQ National Psychotrauma Centre/University of Groningen, Netherlands

Carolina Gonzalez, University of Southern Queensland, Australia

Jetske van Heemstra, ARQ Cetrum '45, Netherlands

Sara Helmink, chairwoman Stichting Klimaatpsychologie, Netherlands

Dan Jenkins, Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Jinhee Hyun, Daegu University, South Korea

Oj Jiaqing, University of Macau, Macao

Samuel Jinadu, CSDevNet, Nigeria

Ashraf Kagee, Stellenbosch University, South Africa

Tarandeep Kang, University of Warwick, UK

Brittany King, University of Montana, USA

Ahlke Kip, University of Münster, Germany

Josianne Lamothe, Université de Sherbrooke, Canada

Emma Lawrance, Imperial College London, UK

Sarah Lowe, Yale School of Public Health, USA

Alessandro Massazza, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK

Kelton Minor, Columbia University, Data Science Institute

Tulsi Modi, Planetary Health Alliance, USA

Jessica Newberry, Imperial College London, UK

Nick Obradovich, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, USA

Meaghan O'Donnell, University of Melbourne, Australia

Miranda Olff, Amsterdam UMC, Netherlands

Larry Palinkas University of Southern California, USA

Janne Punski-Hoogervorst, Haifa University, Israel

Jennifer Robohm, University of Montana, USA

Joe Ruzek, Palo Alto University/Stanford University, USA

Debra Safer, Stanford University, USA

Ans Vercammen, University of Queensland, Australia

Francis Vergunst, University of Oslo, Norway

​Britt Wray, Stanford University, USA

Projects

1. Climate change and mental health – A dual-continuum complete state framework

Francis Vergunst (PI), Rachel Williamson, Alessandro Massazza, Helen Berry, Miranda Olff

 

Mental health and psychological wellbeing co-vary but they are not the same concept. Thus, while climate change may harm them both, it does so via different risk pathways with commensurately different effects. This conceptual review provides a framework for better understanding how health and wellbeing are related, how each is affected by climate change, how these complex pathways may interact and the range of outcomes that may eventuate from increasing mental disorders to lowered wellbeing.

This paper argues that a dual continuum framework offers a more nuanced approach to evaluating climate change impacts on mental health by considering mental disorders and subjective wellbeing simultaneously. This is because mental disorders and subjective wellbeing are conceptually and empirically distinct, with different climate-related antecedents and mental health endpoints, and both are necessary to evaluate the full burden of climate change.

Status: completed

Vergunst, F., Williamson, R., Massazza, A., Berry, H. L., Olff, M., Williamson, R., Massazza, A., Berry, H. L., & Olff, M. (2024). A dual-continuum framework to evaluate climate change impacts on mental health. Nature Mental Health, 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44220-024-00326-x

 

2. Training Climate-Aware Clinicians: Suggestions for Providing Psychological Care in a Changing Climate

Rachel Williamson, Joe Ruzek, Jiaqing O, Britt Wray, Debra Safer, Janne Punski-Hoogervorst, Jennifer Robohm, Jinhee Hyun

The nature, breadth, and scope of the climate emergency and related ecosystem crises require a reexamination of the roles of mental health professionals and, consequently, a reexamination of the programs and experiences that prepare trainees for clinical work. In this paper, we argue that mental health training includes an explicit focus on the development of core competencies that empower trainees to: (1) adapt and develop assessment and intervention strategies to be ‘climate-aware’ (i.e., to address the mental health impacts of climate-related global stressors); (2) include community adaptation and resilience as therapeutic goals with individuals, groups, and organizations; and (3) engage in an expanded scope of professional responsibilities. We offer specific, albeit preliminary, suggestions for defining and incorporating these competencies.

 

Status

Manuscript in preparation.
 

References

Augustinavicius, J., Lowe, S. R., Massazza, A., Hayes, K., Denckla, C. A., White, R. G., Cabán-Alemán, C., Clayton, S., Verdeli, L., & Berry, H. (2021). Global climate change and trauma. International Society of Traumatic Stress Studies.

Berry, H., Waite, T. D., Dear, K. B. G., Capon, A. G., & Murray, V. (2018). The case for systems thinking about climate change and mental health. Nature Climate Change, 8(4), 282-290. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0102-4

 

Vergunst, F., Williamson, R., Massazza, A., Berry, H. L., Olff, M., Williamson, R., Massazza, A., Berry, H. L., & Olff, M. (2024). A dual-continuum framework to evaluate climate change impacts on mental health. Nature Mental Health, 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44220-024-00326-x

Other resources

IPCC 6th assessment: https://www.ipcc.ch/assessment-report/ar6/

ISTSS Briefing Paper on Climate Change and Trauma: https://istss.org/public-resources/istss-briefing-papers/briefing-paper-global-climate-change-and-trauma

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3. Measuring the Psychological Impacts of Climate Change

Brittany King, Janne Punski-Hoogervorst, Tarendeep Kang, Ahlke Kip, Dan Jenkins, Samuel Jinadu, Rachel Williamson

Part 1: Systematic Review of Existing Measures: We aim to summarize all existing measures that focus on assessing a climate change-specific psychological outcome.

Part 2: Measure Development: Using an exposure-response model, we aim to develop and validate a measure to assess both the different types of climate-related exposures and the diverse psychological responses to these exposures.

 

Status: in progress.

Contact Brittany King for more info.

 

4. Clinician Reactions to Client Climate Concerns: Investigating the Existential Impact

Rachel Williamson, Brittany King

Research demonstrates the far-reaching impact of mortality reminders on attitudes and behaviors. Climate change reminders may have parallel impacts, representing a similar annihilation threat. This study aimed to assess the impact of exposure to reminders of climate change in the context of clinical work (i.e., clinicians exposed through client complaints of climate-related distress). 150 mental health care providers across the United States were randomly assigned to read one of three vignettes in which a client describes either death anxiety, climate change anxiety, or social anxiety (control). They then completed outcome measures, including client ratings, professional identity, and general affect.

US data collection complete.

Status: ongoing, open to collaborators

For collaboration on replication and/or follow-up studies, contact Rachel Williamson.

Organizations and networks working on climate change and mental health

PHA

We are proud to announce that the GCTS is a formal member of the Planetary Health Alliance (PHA) a consortium of universities, non-governmental organizations, research institutes, and government entities from around the world committed to understanding and addressing global environmental change and its health impacts. We aim to collaborate on projects that directly or indirectly impact traumatic stress levels around the world. 

Learn more about planetary health science, solutions, and ways to get involved (PHA). 

CO  

COP² is a global network of organisations generating tangible policies and actions that will strengthen our ability both to endure and to innovate and adapt to the climate crisis.

Read more

CCM

Connecting Climate Minds (CCM) Project

This is a new initiative, in partnership with the Imperial College of London and funding from the Wellcome Trust, to address the mental health impact of a changing planet. The goals are to build: 

1.       An inclusive and actionable research agenda that provides the evidence needed for policy and practice to safeguard mental health while enabling planetary health action, deeply grounded in the needs of people with lived experience.

2.       A connected, supported and engaged community of practice (regionally and globally) with the right tools to enact this agenda, including greater capacity and knowledge sharing.

Read More 

UnitedGMH

United for Global Mental Health is an international NGO working for a world where mental health support is accessible to everyone, everywhere without stigma or restrictions. Climate change, the environment, and mental health represent key areas of focus.

Psy4F

Psychologists for Future / Psychotherapists for Future (Psy4F) is a trans-institutional and non-party affiliated climate advocacy group of psychologists and psychotherapists contributing psychological and therapeutic expertise to meeting the challenges that are posed by the climate crisis in addition to be able to establish a sustainable future.

Read more

Stichting Klimaatpsychologie

Stichting Klimaatpsychologie is the Dutch foundation of climate psychologists with a mission! They are happy to collaborate and support global initiatives where they can. 

Read more

CIRCLE  | Community-minded Interventions for Resilience,  Climate Leadership and Emotional wellbeing

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences of Stanford Medicine

Stanford University, USA

Director: Britt Wray

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