Americans'
Mental Health is Latest Victim of Changing Climate (Op-Ed)
3
February, 2014
Freelance
writer Marlene Cimons is a former Washington reporter for the Los
Angeles Times who specializes in science and medicine. She writes
regularly for the National Science Foundation, Climate Nexus, Microbe
Magazine, and the Washington
Post
health section, and
she is an adjunct professor of journalism at the University of
Maryland, College Park. Cimons contributed this article to
LiveScience's
Expert
Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.
For
months after Hurricane Sandy sent nearly six feet of water surging
into her home in Long Beach, N.Y. — an oceanfront city along Long
Island' s south shore — retired art teacher Marcia Bard Isman woke
up many mornings feeling anxious and nauseated. She had headaches,
and inexplicable bouts of sadness. She found herself crying for no
apparent reason.
"I
would feel really sad, and that's just not me," she said. "I
felt like the joy was out of my life. I still haven't recaptured it."
What
Isman is experiencing is one of the little-recognized consequences
of climate change,
the mental anguish experienced by survivors in the aftermath of
extreme and sometimes violent weather and other natural disasters.
The emotional toll of global warming is expected to become a national
— and potentially global — crisis that many mental health experts
warn could prove far more serious than its physical and environmental
effects.
"When
you have an environmental insult, the burden of mental health disease
is far greater than the physical," said Steven Shapiro, a
Baltimore psychologist who directs the program on climate change,
sustainability and psychology for the nonprofit Psychologists for
Social Responsibility (PsySR). "It has a much larger effect on
the psyche. Survivors can have all sorts of issues: post traumatic
stress disorder, depression,
anxiety, relationship issues, and academic issues among kids."
A
report
released in 2012 by the National Wildlife Federation's Climate
Education Program and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation predicted a
steep rise in mental and social disorders resulting from climate
change-related events in the coming years, including depression and
anxiety, post-traumatic
stress disorder,
substance abuse, suicide and widespread outbreaks of violence.
Moreover, it estimated that about 200 million Americans will be
exposed to serious psychological distress from climate-related events
in the coming years, and that the nation's counselors, trauma
specialists and first responders currently are ill-equipped to cope.
"The
physical toll has been studied, but the psychological impacts of
climate change have not been addressed," said Lise Van Susteren,
a forensic psychiatrist and one of the report's authors. "We
must not forget that people who are physically affected by climate
change will also be suffering from the emotional fallout of what has
happened to them. Others suffer emotionally from a distance,
especially those who are most keenly aware of the perils we face, or
as in the case of children, those who feel especially vulnerable. And
the psychological damage is not only over what is happening now, but
what is likely going to happen in the future.
"This
kind of anticipatory anxiety is especially crippling and is
increasingly being seen among climate activists — in some cases
rising to the level of a kind of 'pre-traumatic' stress disorder,"
she added.
Moreover,
society can expect to experience a collective sense of sadness, anger
and defeat as it confronts the inevitable, and possibly irreversible,
long-term environmental
effects of global warming,
and the failure to prevent them, according to Van Susteren.
"We
are undoing millions of years of evolution, and the situation is a
catastrophe," she said. "Climate activists on the front
lines are desperate to convey this to the public, but are told to be
wary of paralyzing people with fear. Compounding the issue is that
people often generally are not 'good' at knowing they are anxious,
or, if they do, often don't know why.
"Because
of the magnitude of the problem, and the fact that our leaders are
not responding commensurate with the threat, feelings of
vulnerability are repressed and cause unseen psychological damage,"
she added.
The
report emphasized that certain populations would be more at risk than
others, including the elderly, the poor, members of the military,
people with pre-existing mental-health disorders, and especially
America's 70 million children.
The
report compared what children may be feeling today to the distress
suffered by American and Russian children over the threat of the
nuclear bomb in the 1950s during the Cold War era, saying that
climate change could have the same destructive impact. "Some
children are already anxious about global warming and begin to
obsess, understandably, about the future, unmoved by the small
reassurances adults may attempt to put forth," the report said.
The
report recommendedthat the federal government draft a plan to enact a
large-scale response to the mental-health effects of global warming,
including public-education campaigns, increased training for
mental-health professionals, and developing mental-health incident
response teams.
Despite
the nation's experiences with previous natural disasters, "the
scientific data show that what lies ahead will be bigger, more
frequent, and more extreme than we have ever known," prompting
potentially dire mental-health impacts, the report warned.
"Many
people will experience an inordinate risk and their minds will be
changed because of it," Shapiro said. . "Although some
people may come out of it stronger, experiencing a trauma can totally
change the way you function."
Isman
certainly would agree. "Initially, I was numb, running on
adrenaline," she said.
"There
was a delayed reaction. I didn't realize what was going on with me
emotionally."
For
starters, she and her husband, Michael Clark, had to cope with
$125,000 worth of damage to their house and the loss of two cars.
"When the surge hit, I was standing on the steps to my basement
and heard this roar," she said. "I looked toward the sound
and, literally, a wave of water came into the basement. Within two
minutes the basement was nearly filled to the ceiling. It stopped at
the second step before my kitchen."
The
couple spent the first week after Sandy camped out in a dark, cold
house without water, electricity, or working toilets. After that,
they moved in with friends until their toilets were functioning
again. Still, living conditions were extremely difficult. The
hurricane had wrecked the local sewage plant, contaminating the flood
waters that entered her basement. Also, Long Beach imposed a curfew,
and blocked bridge access into the city to prevent looting. "No
one was allowed in without an ID," Isman said. "The rules
were necessary and kept us safe, although at the same time, it did
make things more complicated and stressful."
Yet,
as bad as it was for Isman, it was far worse for others. Nearly 300
people died, and many lost their homes permanently. This knowledge
weighed heavily on Isman, who felt guilty about her own emotional
reactions. "I thought I had no right to feel what I was feeling
because my situation wasn't as bad as theirs," she says. She
found solace at a local Hurricane Sandy support group formed shortly
after the disaster.
Isman's
emotions "were all normal reactions to a life-shattering
situation," says Dr. Laurie Nadel, a psychotherapist who started
the group and who lost her own Long Beach home to the storm. "I
knew there was a need for a safe place for people to come and talk
about what they were going through. It can be very isolating. You
need a place where you can share and normalize your experiences with
other people."
Members
of Psychologists for Social Responsibility worry that continued
inaction on climate change will only bring more of the same. The
group recently wrote
to Congress,
urging lawmakers to address climate change to avoid a mental health
catastrophe.
"Without
such action, the impact of heat waves, extreme storms and floods,
droughts and water shortages, food production problems, lessened air
quality, sea level rise, and displacement from homes and communities
is likely to pose significant mental-health challenges to millions of
Americans and billions of others worldwide," the psychologists
wrote in their letter.
The
resulting stress and rise in mental illness likely will "harm
interpersonal relationships, make people less able to work
constructively or do well in school, and ultimately injure the
day-to-day functioning of our society and our economy," the
group told Congress. "Hurricane Katrina demonstrated all of
these outcomes in microcosm to the American people, and an
ample body of research
strongly predicts such severe psychological and social consequences."
To
be sure, while it is possible for survivors to recover emotionally,
"there is significant sudden loss that needs to be processed,"
Nadel said. "There is physical loss, there is emotional loss,
and there is social loss."
Meanwhile,
if the world's nations do not contend aggressively with the dangers
posed by a warming planet, "we will have to deal with the
reality that we are living in unpredictable, unstable and volatile
times when it comes to climate change," Nadel said. "When I
talk to people in other countries who've been living with natural
disasters their whole lives, they don't expect the phones to always
work, and they understand that people may not show up on time because
a tree might have fallen on the road. They accept that emergencies
are part of life and out of their control.
"Their
social rhythms have adapted, and that's what we're going to have to
do," she added. "We will have to shift our mindset to
accepting uncertainty and unpredictability, and develop a different
belief system about what we'll have to contend with when the order of
things changes."
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