

But anxiety played a role in motivating people to adopt environmentally-friendly behaviors, especially in richer, more individualistic countries - places where people are more likely to fly carbon-guzzling planes or drive large cars for small trips. The new study found that across the board, people's concerns about climate change motivated them to want to take action.

"It's almost like, 'Look, as long as we can provide the basic stuff - people can eat, they have a place to sleep, they have water - that's it. "We very rarely find anyone talking about how people in Ghana or the Philippines feel about climate change," he said. Ogunbode thinks developing countries should play a bigger part in the conversation, since the link between emotions and mental health is "just as strong" as it is in rich countries. While the study didn't look at how people respond to the phrase itself, the results show that it's not just those in wealthier countries like the United States who are wrestling with tough emotions as a result of climate change. But some researchers have argued that the phrase "climate anxiety" is ambiguous - a buzzword, not a clinical diagnosis - and that it tends to resonate more with white and wealthy people than those experiencing the most severe effects of climate disasters. Experts say that feeling grief, fear, and anxiety is a logical response to the catastrophic situation. "Climate anxiety" has become a catch-all for how worries about our overheating planet affect people's mental health. Previous research has suggested that climate anxiety is widespread: Last year, a survey in 11 countries around the world found that 45 percent of teens and young adults said that climate anxiety was affecting their daily lives and ability to function. Nearly a quarter felt "terrified," and even more felt either "very" or "extremely" anxious. They found that it was hurting people's mental health virtually everywhere, from Brazil to Uganda, Portugal to the Philippines.Īlmost half of the young people surveyed said they were "very" or "extremely" worried about climate change. Ogunbode and researchers all over the world surveyed more than 10,000 university students in 32 countries, asking how climate change made them feel. The study, recently published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology, takes the broadest look yet at climate anxiety around the globe. "The question is whether you have the opportunity or not to engage in those behaviors," said Charles Ogunbode, a psychologist at the University of Nottingham in the United Kingdom. New research reveals that these anxieties are not just Western concerns - they're common among young people on nearly every continent - but that the ability to do something about them depends on where you live. Maybe you can alleviate your worries by doing something positive, like going to a protest, becoming an advocate for mass transit, or trying to get an environmental champion elected. If you're feeling anxious about climate change, the common wisdom goes, there's an antidote: Take action. Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
