The Intersection of Climate Change and Mental Health: Understanding the Complexities
気候変動とメンタルヘルスの交叉:複雑性の理解 (AI 翻訳)
Olamide Omigbile
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本論文は気候変動がメンタルヘルスに与える多面的な影響を、災害体験や環境変化による心理的負荷を含めて包括的にレビュー。特に子どもや低所得コミュニティなど脆弱層への不均衡な影響を指摘し、適応策への精神的ケア統合の必要性を強調する。
English
This paper reviews the complex relationship between climate change and mental health, including direct disaster impacts and slow-onset environmental changes. It highlights disproportionate effects on vulnerable populations and emphasizes integrating mental health into climate adaptation and disaster preparedness policies.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
日本は台風や熱波などの気象災害が頻発しており、高齢化社会における災害後のメンタルヘルスケアが重要課題。本レビューは自治体や企業のBCP策定において心理的サポートを考慮する根拠となる。
In the global GX context
As climate-related disasters intensify globally, this paper underscores the need to embed mental health support into climate adaptation frameworks, a dimension often overlooked in disclosure and transition planning.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides a comprehensive synthesis of evidence and identifies key research gaps in climate-mental health linkages.
🏢実務担当者:Highlights the importance of incorporating mental health support into disaster preparedness and community resilience programs.
🏛政策担当者:Makes a case for integrating mental health into national climate adaptation plans and health system strengthening.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Climate change is increasingly recognised as a significant global health threat with profound implications for mental health and psychosocial well-being. This paper examines the complex and multidimensional relationship between climate change and mental health, drawing on emerging evidence from global studies, policy reports, and interdisciplinary research. It highlights how both acute climate-related events such as floods, wildfires, heatwaves, and storms and slowonset environmental changes, including drought, desertification, and sea-level rise, contribute to a wide spectrum of mental health outcomes. These range from clinically diagnosed conditions such as anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) to emerging constructs such as eco-anxiety and solastalgia, which capture the emotional and existential distress associated with environmental degradation and uncertain futures. The paper further explores the key pathways through which climate change affects mental health, including direct exposure to disasters, indirect socioeconomic disruptions such as displacement and livelihood loss, and anticipatory stress linked to perceived future risks.Particular attention is given to populations that are disproportionately affected, including children and youth, low-income communities, Indigenous populations, and frontline workers, who often face heightened exposure and limited adaptive capacity. Evidence reviewed in this study consistently demonstrates elevated levels of psychological distress among these groups, underscoring the inequitable burden of climate-related mental health impacts. In addition, the paper synthesises current evidence on interventions and policy responses, emphasising the importance of integrating mental health into climate adaptation, disaster preparedness, and health system strengthening. Community-based approaches, social support mechanisms, and climate-resilient health systems are identified as critical components for mitigating adverse mental health outcomes. However, significant research gaps remain, including limited longitudinal data, lack of standardised measurement tools, and insufficient evidence from low- and middle-income countries.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20526139first seen 2026-06-23 05:21:59 · last seen 2026-06-23 05:22:36
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