Skip to main content

Doctors prescribe action for 'eco-anxiety'

#905 of 2542 articles from the Special Report: Race Against Climate Change
Tina Yeonju Oh pictured at the Amherst Community Wind Farm in Cumberland County on August 20, 2018. Photo courtesy of Brower Youth Awards

Tina Yeonju Oh experiences "eco-anxiety."

Age 22, she knows a lot of other young adults who "are having internal conversations with themselves but also with friends and family about whether or not to have children.”

“Young people are facing this anxiety and mostly because we are the generation to live through this crisis,” the environmental activist and organizer told National Observer.

One of the country's top environmentalists under 25, she is a graduate student in environmental studies at Dalhousie University and the interim coordinator of the Canadian Youth Delegation, a group sent to international United Nations climate conferences. Now a resident of Halifax, she has been to conferences in Morocco and Germany.

There's an element of hopelessness, she says, that arises from the steady barrage of doomsday reports or news about climate-accelerated natural disasters every day.

Those observations reflect findings of a new report whose lead author, Dr. Courtney Howard, says climate-related events have “started to shift peoples thoughts away from thinking of climate change as something that has to do with carbon dioxide on a graph and something that has to do with them and their children and their health and their future.”

Grief, post-traumatic stress disorder and the eco-anxiety Oh described are among the public health risks that will accompany an era of rampant food insecurity, isolation and displacement, according to the Lancet Countdown 2018 Report.

Dr. Howard said that evacuating one’s home due to the extreme weather events that increase in frequency with climate change – such as flooding and wildfires – creates the conditions for the sense of loss that imperils mental wellbeing.

These stressors may increase rates of alcohol and drug abuse, said Howard, and early research also suggests links between extreme heat and suicide.

Dr. Courtney Howard speaks at the Lancet Countdown Report launch at the General Campus of the Ottawa Hospital on Nov. 2, 2017. Photo by Alex Tétreault

“Health care professionals see first-hand the devastating health impacts of our changing climate. From wildfires to heat waves to new infectious diseases, we’re already treating the health effects of climate change,” said Dr. Gigi Osler, president of the Canadian Medical Association (CMA), in a statement.

"This is the public health imperative of our time.”

The Canadian Lancet document was prepared with support from CMA and the Canadian Public Health Association.

As researchers discussed the Lancet report, Ontario Environment Minister Rod Phillips presented the government's climate plan, many weeks after repealing the former Liberal government's policies to reduce carbon emissions. Despite consensus from policy and climate experts, Ontario's new plan does not feature a carbon tax, which the minister referred to as an unnecessary “dogma.”

‘I have never felt grief like that before’

On the night of U.S. President Donald Trump’s election, Oh was in Marrakesh, Morocco for the United Nations climate conference following the Paris Agreement. She and some others at the conference had not expected Trump's win.

"I have never felt grief like that before,” she told National Observer.

She recalls being unable to eat or sleep.

“I think it was compounded by the fact that I was in a space where we were talking about the urgency of climate change and how immediately and how big the effects would be for marginalized communities all over the world. And just feeling the weight of the most powerful politician in the world be a climate denier.”

While Canadians are becoming more aware of the impending risks, she said, many are inured from the consequences.

Seemingly vast natural resources and a sprawling geography mean that many communities are “shielded away.”

The media resource for URL https://www.facebook.com/nationalobserver/videos/1948083421874425/ could not be retrieved.

“But of course those impacts are not carried proportionately by Canadians,” said Oh. “We know that Indigenous peoples really face the biggest burden of climate change within Canada.”

Northern communities have been the focus of early research. An example is Inuvik, a town and region in the Northwest Territories, where a 50-year temperature increase of three degrees Celsius has been recorded, according to the report.

“That’s a big deal when talking about the difference between solid water and liquid water,” said Howard, referring to communities that rely on ice roads to access hunting grounds, transportation, and friends and family.

Howard cites research out of Memorial University, where Dr. Ashlee Cunsolo researched ecological grief in Rigolet, Nunatsiavut. The profound changes to the land have meant “feelings of loss, of sadness, of worry about what the future will bring for them, for their children, and what those further changes in the environment will mean to their way of life,” said Howard.

While more conclusive research into mental health outcomes will hopefully emerge, Howard said she’s seeing a critical mass in dialogue, spurred in part by a wave of climate-related episodes in recent years.

After a heatwave in Montreal that killed dozens last summer, for example, mainstream awareness and concern is on the rise, said Howard

People may feel isolated by their grief, especially when they’re in circles of family and friends who aren’t feeling emotional duress.

“It can be alienating. You can think to yourself, ‘well, what’s wrong with me? Maybe I shouldn’t worry about it so much,” said Howard. “If we talk about it, we may still feel sad, but we don’t have to feel lonely and we don’t have to feel like those feelings make us odd. In fact, it’s very normal to be anxious and scared if there’s a threat.”

Greg Dubord, a Canadian expert in cognitive behavioural therapy, describes that feeling as “constructive unpleasant emotion,” said Howard, and a utilitarian evolutionary response that’s kept people alive this long. She likened the primordial reaction to the fight-or-flight instinct that would cause someone to run away from a tiger behind a bush.

Now, she said, our job is to feel those emotions. And act on them.

Comments