气候变化心理困扰与美国加强集体气候行动有关。

Matthew T. Ballew, Sri Saahitya Uppalapati, Teresa Myers, Jennifer Carman, Eryn Campbell, Seth A. Rosenthal, John E. Kotcher, Anthony Leiserowitz, Edward Maibach
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引用次数: 0

摘要

气候变化对心理健康的影响已被越来越多地记录在案;然而,有关气候变化相关心理困扰与参与这一问题之间关系的研究却较少。来自两个美国成年人全国概率样本的结果显示,16%的人报告了至少一种气候变化心理困扰特征,而且某些群体的困扰程度高于其他群体(如西班牙裔/拉美裔、低收入成年人、年轻成年人)。重要的是,即使控制了环境行为的几个相关因素(如政治意识形态、集体效能信念),经历过困扰的人也更有可能参与气候变化的集体行动或表达这样做的意愿。这些发现突出表明,许多美国人正经历着气候变化带来的心理困扰,而这些人更愿意参与集体气候行动。经历这种痛苦的人可能会从支持心理健康和参与气候变化的资源中受益。
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Climate change psychological distress is associated with increased collective climate action in the U.S.
The mental health impacts of climate change are increasingly documented; however, less research has investigated the relationship between climate change-related psychological distress and engagement with the issue. The results from two national probability samples of U.S. adults show that 16% report at least one feature of climate change psychological distress and that certain groups have higher levels of distress than others (e.g., Hispanic/Latinos, lower income adults, younger adults). Importantly, people experiencing distress are more likely to engage in collective action on climate change or express a willingness to do so, even when controlling for several correlates of environmental behavior (e.g., political ideology, collective efficacy beliefs). These findings highlight that many Americans are experiencing psychological distress from climate change, and those who do are more involved in collective climate action. People experiencing such distress may benefit from resources to support mental health and engagement with climate change.
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