Abstract
Climate change and natural resource exploitation can affect Indigenous people’s well-being by reducing access to ecosystem services, in turn impeding transmission of traditional knowledge and causing mental health problems. We used a questionnaire based on the Environmental Distress Scale (EDS) and the Connor–Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC-10) to examine the impacts of environmental changes on 251 members of four Indigenous communities in the eastern Canadian boreal forest. We also considered the potential mitigating effects of sociodemographic characteristics (i.e., age, gender, parenthood, and time spent on the land) and protective factors (i.e., health, quality of life, resilience, life on the land, life in the community, and support from family and friends). Using linear regression, model selection, and multi-model inference, we show that the felt impacts of environmental changes increased with age but were lower for participants with higher quality of life. The effect of resilience was opposite to expectations: more resilient participants felt more impacts. This could be because less resilient individuals ceased to go on the land when environmental changes exceeded a given threshold; thus, only the most resilient participants could testify to the impacts of acute changes. Further research will be needed to test this hypothesis.
Highlights
Climate change, added to an ever-increasing pressure to exploit natural resources, causes environmental changes that impact public health [1,2,3,4]
This could be because less resilient individuals ceased to go on the land when environmental changes exceeded a given threshold; only the most resilient participants could testify to the impacts of acute changes
Indigenous peoples live in close connection with the land and are more directly affected by environmental changes [5,6,7]
Summary
Climate change, added to an ever-increasing pressure to exploit natural resources, causes environmental changes that impact public health [1,2,3,4]. Indigenous peoples live in close connection with the land and are more directly affected by environmental changes [5,6,7]. Reading [12] used the metaphor of a tree to explore the social determinants of Indigenous health. The tree crown represents the proximal determinants such as age, gender, the physical environment, income, and social status. The tree roots represent distal (or structural) determinants, i.e., the historical, political, ideological, economical, and social foundations from which all other determinants evolve
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More From: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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