Abstract

Children, particularly those living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), are highly vulnerable to climate change and its impacts. Our main objective was to conduct a scoping literature review to determine how exposure to climate change and climate-related disasters influences the presence of mental disorders among children in LMICs. We also aimed to identify gaps in this area of scholarship. We included studies of children in LMICs that had a climate change or climate-related disaster exposure and mental disorder outcome. Twenty-three studies were included in the final synthesis. Fourteen studies were conducted in China, three in India, two each in Pakistan and the Philippines, and one each in Namibia and Dominica. All studies assessed the association between a climate-related disaster exposure and a mental disorder outcome, while none explored broader climate change-related exposures. Post-traumatic stress disorder (n = 21 studies) and depression (n = 8 studies) were the most common mental disorder outcomes. There was considerable between-study heterogeneity in terms of sample size, follow-up length, and outcome measurement. Overall, the literature in this area was sparse. Additional high-quality research is required to better understand the impacts of climate-related disasters and climate change on mental disorders within this population to ultimately inform future policies and interventions.

Highlights

  • Our climate is currently experiencing a rapid and unsustainable increase in temperature, largely driven by human greenhouse gas emissions

  • We included all primary research published in 2007 or later that explored the relationship between a climate change or climate-related disaster exposure and a mental disorder outcome in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) (Table 1)

  • All studies included in this review investigated climate-related disaster exposures such as floods and typhoons, while none investigated broader climate change-related exposures such as gradual changes in temperature and precipitation

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Summary

Introduction

Our climate is currently experiencing a rapid and unsustainable increase in temperature, largely driven by human greenhouse gas emissions. Climate change has been recognized as “the biggest global health threat of the 21st century” [3]. The changing climate has a wide range of impacts on human health, such as increasing transmission of infectious diseases, increasing mortality due to heatwaves and air pollution, as well as contributing to undernutrition driven by reduced crop yields [4]. Climate change harms human mental health and well-being [5,6]. Experiences of climate-related disasters, which are increasing in frequency and severity due to climate change [2], contribute to psychological trauma. Exposure to flooding has been associated with a variety of negative mental health outcomes such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, and overall poor well-being [7]

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