A new report unveiled by the American Psychiatric Association explored how various environmental phenomena attributable to climate change, such as severe weather calamities, soaring heat, and substandard air quality, can ignite or magnify mental health complications among the younger demographic.
The report elucidates that natural disasters have the potential to induce post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in children and teenagers.
Furthermore, long-standing issues stemming from heatwaves, droughts, and inferior air quality may heighten the susceptibility to numerous mental health predicaments, including anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, aggression, cognitive deficiencies, and beyond.
In the words of Dr. Dennis P. Stolle, the association’s senior director of applied psychology, who scrutinized the report, “The psychological injuries inflicted upon children and youth in our nation are transpiring presently.”
He further emphasized the immediacy of the situation, underscoring that collective, swift action is imperative.
The report, disclosed this past Wednesday, acts as a sequel to a 2021 research study undertaken conjointly by the American Psychiatric Association and ecoAmerica.
It adds to an ongoing series of research dating back to 2014 by the organizations, synthesizing existing research about the nexus between climate change, mental health, and juvenile development rather than initiating new experiments.
Dr. Sue Clayton, a psychology professor at the College of Wooster and the report’s primary author, accentuated the enhanced vulnerability of children to the mental health repercussions emanating from climate-change-induced weather incidents.
She highlighted the lack of robust coping mechanisms in children, as compared to adults, and indicated that parental stress, originating from environmental events, could cascade down, adversely impacting children’s mental health.
Clayton remarked, “Early-age trauma can cast a long shadow, imposing enduring impacts on emotional wellness and overall well-being.”
The report also ventures into the prenatal realm, explicating that mental health consequences commence even before birth.
Prenatal encounters with catastrophic weather, extreme temperatures, air contamination, and maternal anxiety can elevate a child’s likelihood of encountering a spectrum of behavioral and developmental complications, encompassing anxiety, depression, ADHD, developmental lags, reduced self-control, and psychiatric disorders, potentially having irreversible effects on the nervous system’s development.
For infants and youngsters, climate change-related weather occurrences and media coverage exposure might pave the way for anxiety, sleep disturbances, PTSD, interrupted cognitive development, and major depressive disorder.
Meanwhile, adolescents, while directly susceptible to trauma and anxiety from climate-driven disasters, may also endure indirect effects.
These might manifest as disruptions to their daily lives, such as halted school sessions, damage to their residences, or encountering food scarcity, due to weather anomalies, heat, and pollution, the report underscores.