Climate distress, climate-sensitive risk factors, and mental health among Tanzanian youth: a cross-sectional study

IF 24.1 1区 医学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Leah Prencipe PhD , Tanja A J Houweling PhD , Prof Frank J van Lenthe PhD , Lusajo Kajula PhD , Tia Palermo PhD
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Climate change threatens youth mental health through multiple mechanisms, yet empirical studies typically focus on single pathways. We explored feelings of distress over climate change among Tanzanian youth, considering associations with climate change awareness and climate-sensitive risk factors, and assessed how these factors relate to mental health.

Methods

Tanzanian youth (aged 18–23 years) from a cluster randomised controlled trial in Mbeya and Iringa regions of Tanzania were interviewed between Jan 25, and March 3, 2021, and included in this cross-sectional study. A threshold of at least 10 on the ten-item Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale was used to classify symptom severity indicative of depression. Regardless of climate change awareness, respondents were asked about their feelings of distress on climate change using inclusive language (changing weather patterns or changing seasons). We estimated rate differences in climate change distress (slight or moderate or extreme vs none) by youth characteristics, extent of climate awareness, and climate-sensitive livelihoods (eg, agriculture, tending livestock) and climate-sensitive living conditions (eg, food or water insecurity), using generalised linear models. We compared depression prevalence by extent of climate change distress and climate-sensitive living conditions.

Findings

Among 2053 youth (1123 [55%] were male and 930 [45%] were female) included in this analysis, 946 (46%) had reported any distress about climate change. Distress was higher among female, more educated, more religious, older youth, and those working in extreme temperatures. Adjusting for climate awareness—a factor strongly associated with climate distress—helped to explain some of these associations. Depression was 23 percentage points (95% CI 17–28) higher among youth who had severe water insecurity than those who did not. Similarly, youth who had severe food insecurity had 23 percentage points higher depression (95% CI 17–28) compared with those who did not. Those reporting climate change distress also had worse mental health—extremely distressed youth had 18 percentage points (95% CI 6–30) higher depression than those reporting none.

Interpretation

Living in conditions worsened by climate change and feeling distressed over climate change have mental health implications among young people from low-resource settings, indicating that climate change can impact youth mental health through multiple pathways.

Funding

Erasmus Trustfonds, Centre for Global Health Inequalities Research, UK's Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office, Oak Foundation, UNICEF, UK's Department of International Development, the Swedish Development Cooperation Agency, Irish Aid.

坦桑尼亚青年的气候困扰、气候敏感风险因素和心理健康:一项横断面研究。
背景:气候变化通过多种机制威胁着青年的心理健康,但实证研究通常侧重于单一途径。我们探讨了坦桑尼亚青年对气候变化的痛苦感,考虑了与气候变化意识和气候敏感风险因素的关系,并评估了这些因素与心理健康的关系。方法:2021年1月25日至3月3日,来自坦桑尼亚姆贝亚和伊林加地区的一项集群随机对照试验的坦桑尼亚青年(18-23岁)接受了采访,并被纳入这项横断面研究。流行病学研究中心抑郁量表10项中的阈值至少为10,用于对抑郁症状的严重程度进行分类。无论对气候变化的认识如何,受访者都会使用包容性的语言(不断变化的天气模式或季节)询问他们对气候变化感到的痛苦。我们使用广义线性模型,根据青年特征、气候意识程度、气候敏感生计(如农业、畜牧业)和气候敏感生活条件(如粮食或水不安全),估计了气候变化困扰(轻度、中度或极端与无)的比率差异。我们根据气候变化的痛苦程度和对气候敏感的生活条件比较了抑郁症的患病率。调查结果:在纳入该分析的2053名青年(1123名[55%]为男性,930名[45%]为女性)中,946名(46%)报告了对气候变化的任何担忧。女性、受教育程度更高、更虔诚、年龄较大的年轻人和在极端温度下工作的人的痛苦更大。适应气候意识——一个与气候困境密切相关的因素——有助于解释其中的一些关联。患有严重水不安全的年轻人的抑郁症比没有严重水不安的年轻人高23个百分点(95%CI 17-28)。同样,与没有严重粮食不安全的年轻人相比,有严重粮食不保障的年轻人的抑郁症高出23个百分点(95%CI 17-28)。那些报告气候变化困扰的人心理健康状况也更差。极度痛苦的年轻人的抑郁症比那些没有报告的人高18个百分点(95%CI 6-30)。解释:生活在因气候变化而恶化的条件下,并对气候变化感到痛苦,这对资源匮乏的年轻人的心理健康有影响,这表明气候变化可以通过多种途径影响年轻人的精神健康。资助:伊拉斯谟信托基金会、全球健康不平等研究中心、英国外交、联邦和发展办公室、橡树基金会、联合国儿童基金会、英国国际发展部、瑞典发展合作署、爱尔兰援助组织。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
28.40
自引率
2.30%
发文量
272
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Planetary Health is a gold Open Access journal dedicated to investigating and addressing the multifaceted determinants of healthy human civilizations and their impact on natural systems. Positioned as a key player in sustainable development, the journal covers a broad, interdisciplinary scope, encompassing areas such as poverty, nutrition, gender equity, water and sanitation, energy, economic growth, industrialization, inequality, urbanization, human consumption and production, climate change, ocean health, land use, peace, and justice. With a commitment to publishing high-quality research, comment, and correspondence, it aims to be the leading journal for sustainable development in the face of unprecedented dangers and threats.
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