Today we’re going to talk about climate change and how it can affect people’s mental health. |
Natural disasters and the impacts of climate change can be stressful. |
Isn’t that right, Beth? |
Yeah, definitely. |
In today’s episode we’re going to find out about how people can protect their mental health from the impacts of climate change. |
We’ll be hearing from a psychiatry expert and a man who survived a wildfire and helped rebuild his town. |
But first, Beth, I have a question for you. |
Scientists aren’t always sure whether natural disasters like floods and wildfires are as a result of human-caused climate change. |
But in January 2025, big wildfires affected big parts of Los Angeles in California. |
But according to research organisation World Weather Attribution, |
human-caused climate change made the fires: a) 10% more likely, b) 35% more likely, or c) 20% less likely? |
Erm… I’m going to say 10% more likely. |
OK. Well, we’ll find out the answer at the end of the programme. |
Now, natural disasters like floods and wildfires can destroy homes and communities. |
People who live in areas affected by natural disasters can often experience climate trauma. |
Trauma is what we call the very bad and long-lasting emotional effects of an event or experience. |
Professor Jyoti Mishra is an expert in climate trauma at the University of California. |
She explained more about the condition to Graihagh Jackson, host of BBC World Service programme, The Climate Question. |
Climate trauma is not an individual trauma, it’s a community-wide trauma which really requires community-wide healing. |
Yeah, I’m really struck by what you’ve said about the fact that |
it’s whole communities that are affected, not individuals, |
but also part of the solution is about the community and how it rebuilds and reknits together. |
Absolutely, yes. |
So, we’ve found that individuals who have a greater sense of positive support from their family and a greater sense of meaningful connection with their community -- they are in general more resilient. |
Jyoti’s research on climate trauma has found that it affects communities rather than individuals. |
Host of the programme Graihagh Jackson is struck by what Jyoti says. |
If you’re struck by an idea, you find it particularly interesting or impressive. |
Graihagh says that part of the solution to climate trauma could be in how the community reknits together. |
This means how the social connections in a community are restored. |
We can often describe a community as close-knit, which means everyone helps and supports each other. |
Jyoti explains that having a strong community also helps reduce or heal climate trauma. |
She says that research has found that people who have a strong community are more resilient when bad things, like natural disasters, happen. |
If you’re resilient, you’re able to get better more easily after something difficult or bad happens. |
One person who had to be resilient is Brad Sherwood. |
He survived a wildfire in Northern California in 2017 called the Tubbs fire, but when he returned home, his neighbourhood was destroyed. |
Brad started to volunteer for a local support network called After the Fire to try to rebuild his community, |
as he explained to BBC World Service programme, The Climate Question. |
The silver lining in all this -- I mean, if it wasn’t for the Tubbs fire, we wouldn’t be working as a community right now to build a new community plaza. |
We were a close community before the Tubbs, but afterwards we are so much stronger and resilient. |
And I think our children are as well. |
They can jump over any hurdle. |
Brad says that the work to rebuild and improve his community is the silver lining to the fire. |
The expression silver lining means a positive thing that comes from a negative situation. |
Brad’s community became more resilient after the fire, including the children. |
He says that they can jump over any hurdle. |
We can describe challenges or difficult things in life as hurdles. |
And it’s quite inspiring, I think, to hear how Brad has taken a bad situation and tried to stay resilient. |
Now, the organisation Brad volunteers for, After the Fire, are helping those impacted by the fires in LA in January. |
Which reminds me, I asked you, Beth, about the impacts of human-made climate change on the wildfires in LA in January. |
And I said 10% more likely. |
Which was, I’m afraid, the wrong answer. |
It was actually 35%. |
Wow. |
OK. Well, let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learnt, starting with trauma, |
which is what we call the very bad and long-lasting emotional effects of an event or experience. |
If you’re struck by an idea or something someone has said, you find it particularly interesting or impressive. |
If a community reknits together, it becomes closer again. |
And a close-knit community is where everyone looks after each other. |
Resilient means able to get better more easily when bad things happen. |
A silver lining is a positive thing that comes from a negative situation. |
And we can describe challenges or difficult things in life as hurdles. |
Once again, our six minutes are up. |
Thanks for listening and goodbye! |
Bye! |