调查气候变化对青年心理健康的影响:国际变化世界研究的设计和实施

Challenges Pub Date : 2023-08-05 DOI:10.3390/challe14030034
A. Vercammen, S. K. Yatirajula, Mercian Daniel, Sandeep Bhupendra Maharaj, Mike H Campbell, N. Greaves, R. Guinto, J. J. B. Aruta, Criselle Angeline Peñamante, Britt Wray, E. Lawrance
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于气候变化有增无减,研究越来越侧重于捕捉和量化这一人道主义和环境危机鲜为人知的心理反应和心理健康影响。人们对年轻人的经历特别感兴趣,由于一系列原因,他们更容易受到伤害,包括他们的发育阶段、这一人口中心理健康状况的高发率,以及他们相对缺乏应对气候威胁的机构。人们成长所处的不同地理和社会文化环境提供了某些机会,也带来了不同的挑战和气候灾害风险。了解生活经历的多样性对于为以证据为基础、由地方主导的社会心理支持以及社会和气候政策提供信息至关重要。在本项目报告中,我们描述了“改变世界”研究的设计和实施情况,重点介绍了我们作为代表英国、印度、特立尼达和多巴哥、圭亚那、巴巴多斯、菲律宾和美国的跨学科合作的经验和个人反思。该项目是在地球健康范式内构思的,旨在描述和量化人为介导的环境系统变化对青年心理健康和福祉的影响。根据当地青年代表的意见,我们设计并发布了一系列适合当地的调查,询问年轻人的心理健康和福祉,以及他们对气候危机和全球COVID-19大流行的想法、情绪和感知代理。本项目报告概述了指导研究设计的原则,并描述了我们在不同的机构、社会和研究治理环境中进行分布式和跨学科研究合作时所遇到的概念和实践障碍。最后,我们强调了经验教训,具体说明了我们对该领域其他合作研究项目的建议,并谈到了我们工作的下一步。该项目明确平衡了环境敏感性和对青年如何应对和应对环境变化的定量、全球可比较数据的需求,激发了气候变化中心理健康全球实践社区的新愿景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Investigating the Mental Health Impacts of Climate Change in Youth: Design and Implementation of the International Changing Worlds Study
As climate change continues unabated, research is increasingly focused on capturing and quantifying the lesser-known psychological responses and mental health implications of this humanitarian and environmental crisis. There has been a particular interest in the experiences of young people, who are more vulnerable for a range of reasons, including their developmental stage, the high rates of mental health conditions among this population, and their relative lack of agency to address climate threats. The different geographic and sociocultural settings in which people are coming of age afford certain opportunities and present distinct challenges and exposures to climate hazards. Understanding the diversity of lived experiences is vitally important for informing evidence-based, locally led psychosocial support and social and climate policies. In this Project Report we describe the design and implementation of the “Changing Worlds” study, focusing on our experiences and personal reflections as a transdisciplinary collaboration representing the UK, India, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Barbados, the Philippines, and the USA. The project was conceived within the planetary health paradigm, aimed at characterizing and quantifying the impacts of human-mediated environmental systems changes on youth mental health and wellbeing. With input from local youth representatives, we designed and delivered a series of locally adapted surveys asking young people about their mental health and wellbeing, as well as their thoughts, emotions, and perceived agency in relation to the climate crisis and the global COVID-19 pandemic. This project report outlines the principles that guided the study design and describes the conceptual and practical hurdles we navigated as a distributed and interdisciplinary research collaboration working in different institutional, social, and research governance settings. Finally, we highlight lessons learned, specify our recommendations for other collaborative research projects in this space, and touch upon the next steps for our work. This project explicitly balances context sensitivity and the need for quantitative, globally comparable data on how youth are responding to and coping with environmental change, inspiring a new vision for a global community of practice on mental health in climate change.
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