Article Type
Changed
Mon, 05/07/2018 - 13:53

 

– Of the broad range of direct and indirect threats to public health anticipated from climate change, those involving mental health will place psychiatrists on the front lines of efforts to mitigate the impact, a member of the Climate Psychiatry Alliance said at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

“One thing climate changes mean for us in psychiatry is more work,” reported Janet L. Lewis, MD, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester (N.Y.).

Mental health is sensitive to climate. “Psychiatric patients can be particularly vulnerable to the medical effects of climate change,” Dr. Lewis said. “People with schizophrenia exhibit impaired thermoregulatory functioning, and many of our medications can impair the body’s normal heat regulation.”

The evidence of increased death rates among schizophrenia patients during heat waves has been attributed to this phenomenon as well as to the failure of patients with mental disorders to seek or obtain relief from heat, according to Dr. Lewis, but she noted that many studies have linked spikes in heat to increased aggression and violence. These links are true for the individual, and they affect trends in communities.

As a cause of societal stresses, such as food and water insecurity, climate change also has the very real potential of producing traumatic disruptions commensurate with disasters such as hurricanes or earthquakes. Noting that the rate of PTSD after such natural disasters typically runs at around 30%, Dr. Lewis suggested that psychiatrists might face large challenges from major upheavals induced by climate change.

However, even in the absence of catastrophic consequences, significant psychiatric morbidity may be generated by climate change in the form of “ecoanxieties” or “solastalgia,” a term coined about 10 years ago to describe psychic anxiety induced by environmental change. While many individuals continue to function normally despite fear or anxiety about climate change, Dr. Lewis said that there are many reports in the literature now show that psychoterratic illness, another term for this phenomenon, is associated with degraded or threatened environments linked to climate change.

The Climate Psychiatry Alliance is one of several professional psychiatry groups that is engaged in evaluating how psychiatry as a profession should react to climate change. The Climate Psychiatry committee of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry is another. Dr. Lewis, addressing the potential criticism that climate is a political issue, said that “we bring some very particular things to this 21st-century disaster … hopefully, everything I have said about the mental effects of climate change convinces you that it is not just a political problem.”

 

 


It is, however, a problem that is complex. Differentiating complex problems from complicated problems – which can be solved eventually with sufficient information – Dr. Lewis explained that complex problems are dynamic with an interplay between components that make solutions uncertain without experimentation and continual reassessment. She believes both mitigation of the problem and adaption to the inevitability of rising temperatures will be necessary.

This is relevant for psychiatrists who also must adapt to the environmental changes and develop resilience that will help them deal objectively with the mental health consequences of climate change. She noted that environmentalists recognize two traps in approaching solutions to climate change. The first is proposing overly simplistic solutions that fail to address the profound implications of climate change. The second is being rendered inactive by the overwhelming complexity of this growing problem.

Ultimately, Dr. Lewis called for psychiatrists to be proactive in dealing the mental health consequences of climate change. She noted that the APA issued a position statement in 2017, which emphasized that individuals with mental health disorders are disproportionately affected by climate change.

“We as psychiatrists know what it is to deal with complex systems, and we understand through our own work with traumatized patients how to manage patients with trauma responses and how to get empowered and engaged in the rebuilding of realistic lives,” Dr. Lewis said. She believes those skills will be important as the impact of climate change on mental health unfolds.
Meeting/Event
Publications
Topics
Sections
Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

 

– Of the broad range of direct and indirect threats to public health anticipated from climate change, those involving mental health will place psychiatrists on the front lines of efforts to mitigate the impact, a member of the Climate Psychiatry Alliance said at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

“One thing climate changes mean for us in psychiatry is more work,” reported Janet L. Lewis, MD, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester (N.Y.).

Mental health is sensitive to climate. “Psychiatric patients can be particularly vulnerable to the medical effects of climate change,” Dr. Lewis said. “People with schizophrenia exhibit impaired thermoregulatory functioning, and many of our medications can impair the body’s normal heat regulation.”

The evidence of increased death rates among schizophrenia patients during heat waves has been attributed to this phenomenon as well as to the failure of patients with mental disorders to seek or obtain relief from heat, according to Dr. Lewis, but she noted that many studies have linked spikes in heat to increased aggression and violence. These links are true for the individual, and they affect trends in communities.

As a cause of societal stresses, such as food and water insecurity, climate change also has the very real potential of producing traumatic disruptions commensurate with disasters such as hurricanes or earthquakes. Noting that the rate of PTSD after such natural disasters typically runs at around 30%, Dr. Lewis suggested that psychiatrists might face large challenges from major upheavals induced by climate change.

However, even in the absence of catastrophic consequences, significant psychiatric morbidity may be generated by climate change in the form of “ecoanxieties” or “solastalgia,” a term coined about 10 years ago to describe psychic anxiety induced by environmental change. While many individuals continue to function normally despite fear or anxiety about climate change, Dr. Lewis said that there are many reports in the literature now show that psychoterratic illness, another term for this phenomenon, is associated with degraded or threatened environments linked to climate change.

The Climate Psychiatry Alliance is one of several professional psychiatry groups that is engaged in evaluating how psychiatry as a profession should react to climate change. The Climate Psychiatry committee of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry is another. Dr. Lewis, addressing the potential criticism that climate is a political issue, said that “we bring some very particular things to this 21st-century disaster … hopefully, everything I have said about the mental effects of climate change convinces you that it is not just a political problem.”

 

 


It is, however, a problem that is complex. Differentiating complex problems from complicated problems – which can be solved eventually with sufficient information – Dr. Lewis explained that complex problems are dynamic with an interplay between components that make solutions uncertain without experimentation and continual reassessment. She believes both mitigation of the problem and adaption to the inevitability of rising temperatures will be necessary.

This is relevant for psychiatrists who also must adapt to the environmental changes and develop resilience that will help them deal objectively with the mental health consequences of climate change. She noted that environmentalists recognize two traps in approaching solutions to climate change. The first is proposing overly simplistic solutions that fail to address the profound implications of climate change. The second is being rendered inactive by the overwhelming complexity of this growing problem.

Ultimately, Dr. Lewis called for psychiatrists to be proactive in dealing the mental health consequences of climate change. She noted that the APA issued a position statement in 2017, which emphasized that individuals with mental health disorders are disproportionately affected by climate change.

“We as psychiatrists know what it is to deal with complex systems, and we understand through our own work with traumatized patients how to manage patients with trauma responses and how to get empowered and engaged in the rebuilding of realistic lives,” Dr. Lewis said. She believes those skills will be important as the impact of climate change on mental health unfolds.

 

– Of the broad range of direct and indirect threats to public health anticipated from climate change, those involving mental health will place psychiatrists on the front lines of efforts to mitigate the impact, a member of the Climate Psychiatry Alliance said at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.

“One thing climate changes mean for us in psychiatry is more work,” reported Janet L. Lewis, MD, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Rochester (N.Y.).

Mental health is sensitive to climate. “Psychiatric patients can be particularly vulnerable to the medical effects of climate change,” Dr. Lewis said. “People with schizophrenia exhibit impaired thermoregulatory functioning, and many of our medications can impair the body’s normal heat regulation.”

The evidence of increased death rates among schizophrenia patients during heat waves has been attributed to this phenomenon as well as to the failure of patients with mental disorders to seek or obtain relief from heat, according to Dr. Lewis, but she noted that many studies have linked spikes in heat to increased aggression and violence. These links are true for the individual, and they affect trends in communities.

As a cause of societal stresses, such as food and water insecurity, climate change also has the very real potential of producing traumatic disruptions commensurate with disasters such as hurricanes or earthquakes. Noting that the rate of PTSD after such natural disasters typically runs at around 30%, Dr. Lewis suggested that psychiatrists might face large challenges from major upheavals induced by climate change.

However, even in the absence of catastrophic consequences, significant psychiatric morbidity may be generated by climate change in the form of “ecoanxieties” or “solastalgia,” a term coined about 10 years ago to describe psychic anxiety induced by environmental change. While many individuals continue to function normally despite fear or anxiety about climate change, Dr. Lewis said that there are many reports in the literature now show that psychoterratic illness, another term for this phenomenon, is associated with degraded or threatened environments linked to climate change.

The Climate Psychiatry Alliance is one of several professional psychiatry groups that is engaged in evaluating how psychiatry as a profession should react to climate change. The Climate Psychiatry committee of the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry is another. Dr. Lewis, addressing the potential criticism that climate is a political issue, said that “we bring some very particular things to this 21st-century disaster … hopefully, everything I have said about the mental effects of climate change convinces you that it is not just a political problem.”

 

 


It is, however, a problem that is complex. Differentiating complex problems from complicated problems – which can be solved eventually with sufficient information – Dr. Lewis explained that complex problems are dynamic with an interplay between components that make solutions uncertain without experimentation and continual reassessment. She believes both mitigation of the problem and adaption to the inevitability of rising temperatures will be necessary.

This is relevant for psychiatrists who also must adapt to the environmental changes and develop resilience that will help them deal objectively with the mental health consequences of climate change. She noted that environmentalists recognize two traps in approaching solutions to climate change. The first is proposing overly simplistic solutions that fail to address the profound implications of climate change. The second is being rendered inactive by the overwhelming complexity of this growing problem.

Ultimately, Dr. Lewis called for psychiatrists to be proactive in dealing the mental health consequences of climate change. She noted that the APA issued a position statement in 2017, which emphasized that individuals with mental health disorders are disproportionately affected by climate change.

“We as psychiatrists know what it is to deal with complex systems, and we understand through our own work with traumatized patients how to manage patients with trauma responses and how to get empowered and engaged in the rebuilding of realistic lives,” Dr. Lewis said. She believes those skills will be important as the impact of climate change on mental health unfolds.
Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Sections
Article Source
EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM APA
Disallow All Ads
Content Gating
No Gating (article Unlocked/Free)
Alternative CME
Disqus Comments
Default
Use ProPublica