Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-r5fsc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T11:16:19.708Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The impact of climate change on mental health (but will mental health be discussed at Copenhagen?)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 November 2009

L. A. Page*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
L. M. Howard
Affiliation:
Health Service and Population Research Department, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
*
*Address for correspondence: Dr L. A. Page, King's College London, Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, 3rd Floor, Weston Education Centre, 10 Cutcombe Road, London SE5 9RJ, UK. (Email: [email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Climate change will shortly be assuming centre stage when Copenhagen hosts the United Nations Climate Change Conference in early December 2009. In Copenhagen, delegates will discuss the international response to climate change (i.e. the ongoing increase in the Earth's average surface temperature) and the meeting is widely viewed as the most important of its kind ever held (http://en.cop15.dk/). International agreement will be sought on a treaty to replace the 1997 Kyoto Protocol. At the time of writing it is not known whether agreement will be reached on the main issues of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and financing the impacts of climate change, and it appears that the impact of climate change on mental health is unlikely to be on the agenda. We discuss here how climate change could have consequences for global mental health and consider the implications for future research and policy.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2009

Introduction

In recent years public health scientists have begun to document and predict the health impacts of climate change. This has gained momentum in the past year with the publication of several influential papers (Frumkin & McMichael, Reference Frumkin and McMichael2008; Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009; Wiley et al. Reference Wiley, Gostin, Wiley and Gostin2009). In 2007, the Fourth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) assessment report was published and included a chapter on the health effects of climate change (Confalonieri et al. Reference Confalonieri, Menne, Akhtar, Ebi, Hauengue, Kovats, Revich, Woodward, Parry, Canziani, Palutikof, van der Linden and Hanson2007); the report clearly documents the evidence for a wide range of adverse health outcomes consequent on climate change and alludes to the fact that many important outcomes will be psychological. Mechanisms for the health impacts of climate change include altered patterns of infectious disease, injuries from severe weather events, food and water scarcity, and population displacement (Confalonieri et al. Reference Confalonieri, Menne, Akhtar, Ebi, Hauengue, Kovats, Revich, Woodward, Parry, Canziani, Palutikof, van der Linden and Hanson2007; Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009). Meanwhile, others have pointed to the increased global health disparities that climate change will bring, as the poorest countries are likely to suffer the greatest health impacts (McMichael et al. Reference McMichael, Friel, Nyong and Corvalan2008). By the beginning of this decade it was estimated that in excess of 150 000 deaths per year were already occurring as a result of climate change (Patz et al. Reference Patz, Campbell-Lendrum, Holloway and Foley2005) and this number is expected to greatly expand as we approach the middle of the century (Confalonieri et al. Reference Confalonieri, Menne, Akhtar, Ebi, Hauengue, Kovats, Revich, Woodward, Parry, Canziani, Palutikof, van der Linden and Hanson2007). Planning to protect public health in relation to climate change is therefore ongoing on the international stage (WHO, 2009), although the economic and environmental impacts seem to be the prime focus of governments' interests, rather than the health impacts.

Despite this recent activity and the broad recognition that the mental health effects of climate change will be significant, such effects are mostly discussed in vague terms and rarely by those actively involved in mental health research or policy. Mental health is unlikely to feature on the Copenhagen agenda. In this editorial we argue that some of the most important health consequences of climate change will be on mental health and we consider the mechanisms by which these may occur. We also suggest that this is an opportune time for those involved in mental health research to become involved in the debate.

Direct effects

Natural disasters, such as floods, cyclones and droughts, are predicted to increase as a consequence of climate change (IFRC, 2009). This is largely due to the greater likelihood of extreme meteorological events in the years ahead. Adverse psychiatric outcomes are well documented in the aftermath of (natural) disaster (Norris et al. Reference Norris, Friedman, Watson, Byrne, Diaz and Kaniasty2002) and include, among others, post-traumatic stress disorder (Galea et al. Reference Galea, Nandi and Vlahov2005), major depression (Marshall et al. Reference Marshall, Schell, Elliott, Rayburn and Jaycox2007) and somatoform disorders (van den Berg et al. Reference van den Berg, Grievink, Yzermans and Lebret2005). Although enhancing disaster preparedness has become an international priority in recent years, the psychological implications of disasters are often under-recognized (Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009). Hurricane Katrina is a striking example of how disaster-related mental health problems can become intractable, even in Western industrialized countries (Kessler et al. Reference Kessler, Galea, Gruber, Sampson, Ursano and Wessely2008). Hurricane Katrina also illustrated how medical and psychiatric care can dramatically diminish for those with pre-existing mental illness in the period following a disaster, at a time when it is needed most (Weisler et al. Reference Weisler, Barbee and Townsend2006). The needs of people with chronic mental illness have often been overlooked following disaster in favour of trauma-focused psychological interventions and yet the mentally ill occupy multiple vulnerabilities for increased mortality and morbidity at such times. Fortunately, recent guidance now specifically advises humanitarian agencies on how to better care for people with chronic mental illness in the mass emergency situation (IASC, 2007).

As global temperatures increase, heat waves will become more common, last longer and be more severe (Meehl & Tebaldi, Reference Meehl and Tebaldi2004). It is now well recognized that, above a certain threshold, there is a relationship between increasing temperature and increasing mortality (Basu & Samet, Reference Basu and Samet2002). This heat effect is particularly pronounced during heat wave episodes, with an estimated 70 000 dying as a result of the European heat wave of summer 2003 (Robine et al. Reference Robine, Cheung, Le Roy, Van Oyen, Griffiths, Michel and Herrmann2008). There are a variety of reasons to believe that people with mental illness are particularly vulnerable to heat-related death. For example, psychotropic medication is a risk factor for heat-related death (Bouchama & Knochel, Reference Bouchama and Knochel2002), as is pre-existing respiratory and cardiovascular disease (Basu & Samet, Reference Basu and Samet2002) and substance misuse (Marzuk et al. Reference Marzuk, Tardiff, Leon, Hirsch, Potera, Iqbal, Nock and Hartwell1998), all of which are highly prevalent in people with serious mental illness. In addition, maladaptive coping mechanisms and poor quality housing are likely to confer further vulnerability on people with mental health problems (Kovats & Ebi, Reference Kovats and Ebi2006). Finally, there is preliminary evidence that death by suicide may increase above a certain temperature threshold (Page et al. Reference Page, Hajat and Kovats2007; Qi et al. Reference Qi, Tong and Hu2009), suggesting that psychological mechanisms such as impulsivity and aggression could be triggered during periods of hot weather. At present, research and policy interest is focused on the vulnerability to heat-related death of people with chronic physical illness and the elderly, but such interest has not been extended to the mentally ill.

In addition, several infectious diseases are predicted to become more common as a consequence of global warming (e.g. malaria, dengue fever, schistosomiasis, tick-borne encephalitis; see Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009). Adverse impacts such as psychological distress, anxiety and traumatic stress resulting from emerging infectious disease outbreaks have previously been documented in infected patients (De Roo et al. Reference De Roo, Ado, Rose, Guimard, Fonck and Colebunders1998), staff (Maunder, Reference Maunder2004) and the general public (Leung et al. Reference Leung, Lai-Ming, Chan, Sai-Yin, Bacon-Shone, Choy, Hedley, Tai-Hing and Fielding2005). Therefore, should outbreaks become more widespread, an increased burden of mental health problems is likely.

Not all of the mental health effects of climate change will necessarily be negative. Akin to postulated physical health benefits of fewer cold-related winter deaths and shorter influenza seasons, it is possible that warmer average temperatures could benefit some people with mental illness. At present, this remains speculative, as this possibility has not been investigated.

Indirect effects

Indirect consequences of climate change, such as migration and economic collapse, are potential drivers of adverse health outcomes (Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009). Low-lying coastal areas will become uninhabitable as coastlines disappear; this is particularly concerning as 13 of the world's largest 20 cities are situated on the coast. Coastal areas in poor countries will be the worst affected. Coastal change and other manifestations of climate change, such as increased flooding events in some areas and water scarcity in others, are predicted to lead to forced mass migration. Conflicts may also increase in number and constitute another cause of population displacement (Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009). Mass migration will undoubtedly lead to an increased burden of mental illness in affected populations. The vulnerability of those with pre-existing serious mental illness during complex emergencies has recently been highlighted (Jones et al. Reference Jones, Asare, El Masri, Mohanraj, Sherief and van Ommeren2009).

Urbanization (the drift of populations from rural to urban areas) is predicted to continue for the foreseeable future, particularly as droughts and floods threaten traditional rural economies. Urban drift in conjunction with population growth means that the urban population in low- and middle-income countries is predicted to increase from 2.3 billion in 2005 to 4 billion by 2030 (Costello et al. Reference Costello, Abbas, Allen, Ball, Bell, Bellamy, Friel, Groce, Johnson, Kett, Lee, Levy, Maslin, McCoy, McGuire, Montgomery, Napier, Pagel, Patel, de Oliveira, Redclift, Rees, Rogger, Scott, Stephenson, Twigg, Wolff and Patterson2009). Urbanization brings with it some potential health advantages, mainly due to increased opportunities for work and economies of proximity and scale (for example by bringing more of the population closer to major health infrastructure so that access to mental health services is improved). However, urbanicity in developed countries is associated with an increased incidence of schizophrenia (March et al. Reference March, Hatch, Morgan, Kirkbride, Bresnahan, Fearon and Susser2008), and concerns have also been expressed about the negative impact of urbanization on mental health in low- and middle-income countries (Trivedi et al. Reference Trivedi, Sareen and Dhyani2008).

Mental health provision in many low- and middle-income countries is already hugely inadequate (Jacob et al. Reference Jacob, Sharan, Mirza, Garrido-Cumbrera, Seedat, Mari, Sreenivas and Saxena2007) and is unlikely to be prioritized should further economic collapse occur secondary to climate change. Capacity to support the infrastructure needed to train and supervise mental health workers will deteriorate if mental health budgets are not protected. Finally, some have postulated that the knowledge of man-made climate change could in itself have adverse effects on individual psychological well-being (Fritze et al. Reference Fritze, Blashki, Burke and Wiseman2008).

Research challenges

Mental health professionals in clinical, research and policy arenas need to realize that their expertise is crucial to further understanding of the health effects of climate change. Given the likely scope and geographical range across which health effects will be felt, the methodological challenges of studying the themes outlined above are considerable. Collaboration with other disciplines will be crucial; we may need to work with climatologists, geographers, environmental epidemiologists, urban planners, economists, modellers and development specialists to plan and execute meaningful research on these topics. Recent initiatives by funding bodies such as the National Institutes of Health in the USA and the Wellcome Trust in the UK indicate that there is a willingness to fund health research related to climate change. This will be important to inform future mental health policy priorities as climate change progresses.

Conclusion

We suggest that climate change has the potential to have significant negative effects on global mental health. These effects will be felt most by those with pre-existing serious mental illness, but there is also likely to be an increase in the overall burden of mental disorder worldwide. In this editorial we have attempted to explore the mechanisms by which these effects might occur and highlight the vulnerability of those living in the poorest countries. Research is almost entirely lacking in this area, a situation we would urge be addressed so that mental health policy makers can plan for the impact of climate change on mental health.

Declaration of Interest

L.A.P. and L.M.H. are recipients of grants from the MRC (General Practice Research Database access to data scheme 08_002R) and BUPA Foundation (TBF-08-012) entitled: ‘Temperature related deaths in people with serious mental illness’.

Acknowledgements

We are very grateful for the constructive comments of two anonymous reviewers. L.M.H. is affiliated with the National Institute for Health Research, ‘Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health’, Institute of Psychiatry and South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust.

References

Basu, R, Samet, J (2002). Relation between ambient temperature and mortality: a review of the epidemiological evidence. Epidemiologic Reviews 24, 190202.Google Scholar
Bouchama, A, Knochel, J (2002). Heat stroke. New England Journal of Medicine 346, 19781988.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Confalonieri, U, Menne, B, Akhtar, R, Ebi, K, Hauengue, M, Kovats, RS, Revich, B, Woodward, A (2007). Human health. In Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (ed. Parry, M., Canziani, O., Palutikof, J., van der Linden, P. and Hanson, C.), pp. 391431. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Costello, A, Abbas, M, Allen, A, Ball, S, Bell, S, Bellamy, R, Friel, S, Groce, N, Johnson, A, Kett, M, Lee, M, Levy, C, Maslin, M, McCoy, D, McGuire, B, Montgomery, H, Napier, D, Pagel, C, Patel, J, de Oliveira, JA, Redclift, N, Rees, H, Rogger, D, Scott, J, Stephenson, J, Twigg, J, Wolff, J, Patterson, C (2009). Managing the health effects of climate change: Lancet and University College London Institute for Global Health Commission. Lancet 373, 16931733.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Roo, A, Ado, B, Rose, B, Guimard, Y, Fonck, K, Colebunders, R (1998). Survey among survivors of the 1995 Ebola epidemic in Kikwit, Democratic Republic of Congo: their feelings and experiences. Tropical Medicine and International Health 3, 883885.Google Scholar
Fritze, J, Blashki, G, Burke, S, Wiseman, J (2008). Hope, despair and transformation: climate change and the promotion of mental health and wellbeing. International Journal of Mental Health Systems 2, 1323.Google Scholar
Frumkin, H, McMichael, AJ (2008). Climate change and public health. Thinking, communicating, acting. American Journal of Preventative Medicine 35, 403410.Google Scholar
Galea, S, Nandi, A, Vlahov, D (2005). The epidemiology of post-traumatic stress disorder after disasters. Epidemiologic Reviews 27, 7891.Google Scholar
IASC (2007). IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings. Inter-Agency Standing Committee, World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
IFRC (2009). World Disasters Report: Focus on Early Warning, Early Action, pp. 94119. International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies: Geneva.Google Scholar
Jacob, K, Sharan, P, Mirza, I, Garrido-Cumbrera, M, Seedat, S, Mari, J, Sreenivas, V, Saxena, S (2007). Mental health systems in countries: where are we now? Lancet 370, 10611077.Google Scholar
Jones, L, Asare, J, El Masri, M, Mohanraj, A, Sherief, H, van Ommeren, M (2009). Severe mental disorders in complex emergencies. Lancet 374, 654661.Google Scholar
Kessler, R, Galea, S, Gruber, M, Sampson, N, Ursano, R, Wessely, S (2008). Trends in mental illness and suicidality after Hurricane Katrina. Molecular Psychiatry 13, 374384.Google Scholar
Kovats, RS, Ebi, KL (2006). Heatwaves and public health in Europe. European Journal of Public Health 16, 592599.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leung, G, Lai-Ming, H, Chan, S, Sai-Yin, H, Bacon-Shone, J, Choy, R, Hedley, A, Tai-Hing, L, Fielding, R (2005). Longitudinal assessment of community psychobehavioral responses during and after 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong. Clinical Infectious Diseases 40, 17131720.Google Scholar
March, D, Hatch, S, Morgan, C, Kirkbride, J, Bresnahan, M, Fearon, P, Susser, E (2008). Psychosis and place. Epidemiologic Reviews 30, 84100.Google Scholar
Marshall, G, Schell, T, Elliott, M, Rayburn, N, Jaycox, L (2007). Psychiatric disorders among adults seeking emergency disaster assistance after a wildland-urban interface fire. Psychiatric Services 58, 509514.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marzuk, P, Tardiff, K, Leon, A, Hirsch, C, Potera, L, Iqbal, MI, Nock, M, Hartwell, N (1998). Ambient temperature and mortality from unintentional cocaine overdose. Journal of the American Medical Association 279, 17951800.Google Scholar
Maunder, R (2004). The experience of the 2003 SARS outbreak as a traumatic stress among frontline healthcare workers in Toronto: lessons learned. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B 359, 11171125.Google Scholar
McMichael, AJ, Friel, S, Nyong, A, Corvalan, C (2008). Global environmental change and health: impact, inequalities, and the health sector. British Medical Journal 336, 191194.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Meehl, G, Tebaldi, C (2004). More intense, more frequent, and longer lasting heat waves in the 21st century. Science 305, 994997.Google Scholar
Norris, F, Friedman, M, Watson, P, Byrne, C, Diaz, E, Kaniasty, K (2002). 60 000 disaster victims speak: Part I. An empirical review of the empirical literature, 1981–2001. Psychiatry 65, 207239.Google Scholar
Page, LA, Hajat, S, Kovats, RS (2007). Relationship between daily suicide counts and temperature in England and Wales. British Journal of Psychiatry 191, 106112.Google Scholar
Patz, J, Campbell-Lendrum, D, Holloway, T, Foley, J (2005). Impact of regional climate change on human health. Nature 438, 310317.Google Scholar
Qi, X, Tong, S, Hu, W (2009). Preliminary spatiotemporal analysis of the association between socio-environmental factors and suicide. Environmental Health 8, 46.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Robine, J-M, Cheung, SLK, Le Roy, S, Van Oyen, H, Griffiths, C, Michel, J-P, Herrmann, FR (2008). Death toll exceeded 70,000 in Europe during the summer of 2003. Comptes Rendus Biologies 331, 171178.Google Scholar
Trivedi, J, Sareen, H, Dhyani, M (2008). Rapid urbanization – its impact on mental health: a South Asian perspective. Indian Journal of Psychiatry 50, 161165.Google Scholar
van den Berg, B, Grievink, L, Yzermans, J, Lebret, E (2005). Medically unexplained physical symptoms in the aftermath of disasters. Epidemiologic Reviews 27, 92106.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weisler, R, Barbee, J, Townsend, M (2006). Mental health and recovery in the Gulf Coast after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Journal of the American Medical Association 296, 585588.Google Scholar
WHO (2009). WHO Workplan on Climate Change and Health. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
Wiley, LF, Gostin, LO, Wiley, LF, Gostin, LO (2009). The international response to climate change: an agenda for global health. Journal of the American Medical Association 302, 12181220.Google Scholar