"我们不愿意去想这件事,因为它太具有破坏性了":在不断变化的气候中了解加拿大东部年轻女性的心理健康

Kathryn Stone, Barbara Hamilton-Hinch, Megan Aston, Daniel G. Rainham, Rebecca Spencer
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摘要

女性受气候变化的影响尤为严重,然而,尽管心理健康和气候变化是一个新兴领域,却很少有研究关注女性的心理健康。本研究旨在探讨年轻女性对气候变化、性别和心理健康的看法。本研究以女性主义后结构(FPS)方法为指导。研究使用了 FPS 和话语分析来探讨九名参与者对其心理健康与气候变化的关系的看法,以及她们的经历是如何被个人、社会和机构建构的。研究结果强调了参与者与围绕绝望、焦虑、悲伤和沮丧、交叉性、陈规定型观念和性别暴力(GBV)的话语之间的关系。研究结果得到了更多文献的支持,为健康促进学科提供了有关性别适当的气候减缓和适应策略的建议,这些策略优先考虑并承认心理健康。我们敦促健康促进部门认识到气候变化会扩大现有的不平等,并尽可能将这一事实纳入健康和气候变化政策中。气候变化和健康政策应确保妇女在气候驱动的天气事件发生之前得到安全和保护,以防止性别暴力事件的发生。我们建议健康促进媒体专家认识到制造恐慌的危险性和无效性,并尝试宣传气候解决方案,而不仅仅是绝望和生态退化的故事。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“It’s Not Something We Like to Think About Because It’s So Devastating”: Understanding Eastern Canadian Young Women’s Mental Health in Our Changing Climate
Women are disproportionately affected by climate change, yet even though mental health and climate change is an emerging field, little research focuses on their mental health. The purpose of this study was to explore young women’s perceptions of climate change, gender, and mental health. A feminist poststructural (FPS) approach guided this research. FPS and discourse analysis were used to explore nine participants’ perceptions of their mental health in relation to the changing climate, and how their experiences were personally, socially, and institutionally constructed. Findings highlight participant relationships to discourses surrounding hopelessness, anxiety, grief and frustration, intersectionality, stereotypes, and gender-based violence (GBV). Study findings supported by broader literature provide recommendations for the discipline of health promotion regarding gender appropriate climate mitigation and adaptation strategies that prioritize and recognize mental health. We urge health promotion to recognize and integrate the fact that climate change amplifies existing inequities into health and climate change policies whenever possible. Climate change and health policies should ensure women are safe and protected before climate driven weather events to prevent instances of GBV. We recommend that health promotion media specialists recognize the dangers and ineffectiveness of fear mongering and attempt to promote climate solutions as opposed to only stories of despair and ecological degradation.
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