Climate Anxiety and Mental Health in Germany

IF 3 Q2 METEOROLOGY & ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES Climate Pub Date : 2023-07-25 DOI:10.3390/cli11080158
A. Hajek, H. König
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Abstract

Our aim was to investigate the association between climate anxiety and mental health in a general adult population. Cross-sectional data of the general adult population were used (n = 3091 individuals aged 18 to 74 years; March 2022). The Climate Anxiety Scale was used to assess climate anxiety. Probable depression was quantified using the PHQ-9, and the GAD-7 was used to assess probable anxiety. Adjusted for sex, age, marital status, having children in the household, highest level of school education, employment situation, smoking behavior, alcohol intake, frequency of sports activities, chronic illnesses and self-rated health and coronavirus anxiety, multiple logistic regressions showed that a higher climate anxiety was associated with a higher likelihood of probable depression (OR: 1.37, 95% CI: 1.25–1.50). Moreover, regressions showed that a higher climate anxiety was associated with a higher likelihood of probable anxiety (OR: 1.27, 95% CI: 1.15–1.40). In conclusion, our study demonstrated an association between climate anxiety and mental health in Germany. Further research (e.g., based on longitudinal data) is required to confirm our study’s findings.
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德国的气候焦虑与心理健康
我们的目的是调查气候焦虑与普通成年人群心理健康之间的关系。使用了普通成年人群的横断面数据(n=3091名18至74岁的个体;2022年3月)。气候焦虑量表用于评估气候焦虑。使用PHQ-9对可能的抑郁进行量化,并使用GAD-7评估可能的焦虑。根据性别、年龄、婚姻状况、家里有孩子、最高学校教育水平、就业状况、吸烟行为、饮酒、体育活动频率、慢性病以及自我评估的健康和冠状病毒焦虑进行调整,多元逻辑回归显示,气候焦虑越高,可能患抑郁症的可能性越高(OR:1.37,95%CI:1.25-1.50)。此外,回归显示气候焦虑越大,可能患焦虑的可能性越大(OR:1.27,95%CI+1.15-1.40)。总之,我们的研究表明,在德国,气候焦虑与心理健康之间存在关联。需要进一步的研究(例如,基于纵向数据)来证实我们的研究结果。
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来源期刊
Climate
Climate Earth and Planetary Sciences-Atmospheric Science
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
5.40%
发文量
172
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Climate is an independent, international and multi-disciplinary open access journal focusing on climate processes of the earth, covering all scales and involving modelling and observation methods. The scope of Climate includes: Global climate Regional climate Urban climate Multiscale climate Polar climate Tropical climate Climate downscaling Climate process and sensitivity studies Climate dynamics Climate variability (Interseasonal, interannual to decadal) Feedbacks between local, regional, and global climate change Anthropogenic climate change Climate and monsoon Cloud and precipitation predictions Past, present, and projected climate change Hydroclimate.
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