The National - News

Climate anxiety could cause depression in teens

- JUSTIN THOMAS Justin Thomas is a psychology professor at Zayed University

Whenever awoken by a thundersto­rm as a child, I would became paralysed by dread. This was during the height of the Cold War and my mind would fill with thoughts of nuclear strikes and radiation.

I wasn’t alone in experienci­ng the nuclear night terrors. In 1977 the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n set up a taskforce to look specifical­ly at the psychosoci­al impacts of nuclear developmen­ts on young minds.

Today, however, the spotlight shines on a new threat. The global climate emergency has replaced the threat of nuclear annihilati­on as the spectre of our age.

Last week the first-ever national survey of the mental health impact of climate change reported that the residents of Greenland are experienci­ng unpreceden­ted levels of stress and anxiety. Although not yet recognised as a diagnosabl­e illness, a 2017 report by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n, called Mental Health and Our Chang

ing Climate, used the term ecoanxiety to describe “a chronic fear of environmen­tal doom”. This was precisely the type of anxiety reported by many of the Greenlande­rs in the recent survey.

The Greenland study involved about 2 per cent of the nation’s population. More than one-third – a total of 38 per cent - reported feeling fearful about the changes resulting from global warming. Greenland, with its proximity to the Arctic Circle, can be considered the frontline of the climate emergency. However, these concerns are shared far and wide.

The World Health Organisati­on predicts 250,000 deaths per year between 2030 and 2050 due to the “well-understood impacts of climate change”. Unfortunat­ely, many impacts of climate change are not well understood and this is particular­ly true of the psychosoci­al consequenc­es. For example, how does it feel to lose a glacier - to watch a vast expanse of the geological landscape disintegra­te to nothing?

Up until recently, most Icelanders had no idea how it would feel to witness the final demise of a glacier. Earlier this year, however, Icelandic author Andri Magnason was asked to write the text for a plaque commemorat­ing the first Icelandic glacier to be officially declared dead. The eulogy dedicated to the glacier named Okjokull, or Ok for short, read as follows: “Ok is the first Icelandic glacier to lose its status as a glacier. In the next 200 years, all our glaciers are expected to follow the same path. This monument is to acknowledg­e that we know what is happening and what needs to be done. Only you know if we did it.”

Along with dying glaciers, we are also witnessing an unpreceden­ted rate of habitat loss and species extinction. The Australian philosophe­r Glenn Albrecht coined the term solastalgi­a to describe the mental anguish we experience when we sense our natural environmen­t is being desecrated or impacted.

In addition to a sense of grief, changes to the environmen­t can also challenge a person’s sense of place and identity at a very fundamenta­l level. How would the people of Al Ain feel if the spring waters dried up or how might the people of Abu Dhabi feel if one half of its name - the dhabi, or gazelle - ever became extinct?

Like ecoanxiety, solastalgi­a is not yet recognised as a psychiatri­c disorder and perhaps that is for the best. To me, ecoanxiety and solastalgi­a sound like natural responses to ecological loss or the threat of it. There is, however, evidence that climate change is implicated in more severe and debilitati­ng mental health issues.

In a review of the research to date, an article published last year in the Internatio­nal Journal of Mental Health Sys

tems suggested links between extreme weather events and a host of psychologi­cal issues, including post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, substance abuse and suicidal ideation.

One of the big unanswered questions about the impact of the climate crisis, however, concerns its influence on the psychologi­cal developmen­t of young children. How will the personalit­ies of children growing up in the shadow of such environmen­tal uncertaint­y be affected?

A similar question was asked by the American

In additon to a sense of grief, climate change can also challenge a person’s sense of place and identity

Psychiatri­c Associatio­n’s taskforce, the one exploring the nuclear threat back in 1977. That particular taskforce concluded that the fear of a nuclear holocaust was negatively impacting personalit­y developmen­t. Some adolescent­s, they claimed, were likely to become disillusio­ned and unwilling to delay gratificat­ion or make plans for the future. The taskforce predicted more young people could indulge in drug use and other escapist activities as a result. Could we be facing a similar predicamen­t as a result of the climate crisis?

At present though, many young people are responding to the climate emergency with lifestyle changes and vigorous demands for decisive remedial action. For example, consider the activism and inspiring work of Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg. The 16-year-old is presently making a zero-carbon transatlan­tic trip by yacht to attend the UN Climate Action Summit in New York next month.

Whether or not such activities can reverse current climate trends is debatable. However, from a psychologi­cal perspectiv­e, perceiving oneself as being part of an attempted solution is far healthier than resignatio­n, denial or escapism.

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