Climate change distress and impairment in Germany.

Front Public Health

Stiftung Gesundheitswissen, Berlin, Germany.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate change is a big problem for people and can hurt our mental health, but it's important to know that feeling upset about it is different from how it affects our daily life.
  • A study was done in Germany to see how climate change impacts people, especially looking at who feels the most distress and who struggles with everyday activities because of it.
  • The results showed that women, younger people, and those with a good education are more likely to feel upset about climate change, while older people and those with less education may struggle more with daily tasks.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Climate change has been widely recognized as one of the most challenging problems facing humanity and it imposes serious mental health threats. It is important, however, to differentiate between the affective experience of distress over climate change and the functional impairments associated with climate change. Such a distinction is crucial because not all negative affective states are pathological, and they might even motivate pro-environmental behavior. Functional impairments, like not being able to work or maintaining social relationships, however, might require immediate treatment. This study assesses climate change distress and climate change impairment within the population of Germany using a population-representative sample. The results identify vulnerable subgroups and thereby can help to facilitate the development of target group specific intervention programs. Furthermore, this study explores whether climate change distress and climate change impairment are associated with general health, physical health, mental health, and diverse health behaviors.

Methods: Study participants were drawn from a panel which is representative of the German-speaking population in Germany with Internet access. Participants answered a series of questionnaires regarding their climate change distress, climate change impairment, general health, physical health, mental health, and diverse health behaviors. To evaluate differences between subgroups, Bayesian independent samples t-tests were calculated. To evaluate associations between constructs, Bayesian correlations were calculated.

Results: Especially women, younger people, people from West Germany, and people with a high level of formal education seem to experience higher levels of climate change distress. Regarding climate change impairment, the results suggest that especially women, older people, people from West Germany, people with a low level of formal education, people with a low or middle social status, and people with an inadequate/problematic health literacy seem to experience higher levels of climate change impairment. Furthermore, climate change distress and climate change impairment were weakly and differently associated with general health, physical health, mental health, and diverse health behaviors.

Discussion: Climate change distress and impairment are not evenly distributed within German society. The results of this study provide a starting point for the development of target group specific intervention programs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11458408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1432881DOI Listing

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