Journal:
Technical report to Australian Government. Canberra, National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health.
Year:
2008
Publication Keywords:
Abstract:
This paper considers how climate change may affect rural Australian mental health. Rural Australians
live with various systematic disadvantages and many feel marginalised; climate change, especially
drought, has worsened this. With drier conditions and more severe droughts expected in much of
southern and eastern Australia over coming decades, and the demands for change and adaptation
that this will present, we urgently need to understand the likely consequences for the mental health
and wellbeing of people in rural Australia. Existing knowledge can guide us through understanding
likely mental health impacts of acute environmental events, such as natural disasters, but less is
known about what chronic long-term environmental changes, such as drought, have brought in recent
years. While we know how community and social factors affect mental health, and how best to help
people cope with change or respond to health risks, we will need to apply such knowledge to this
novel issue of climate change. In the expectation of more and generally worse adverse weather
events, policy for rural mental health will need to (i) plan for consistent, long-term sustainability and
adaptation, not reacting to each event as if it occurs in isolation, and (ii) be aware that social and
economic factors—which climate change will affect—shape mental health.
We view our country as a land of climatic extremes. Rural Australian communities, where farming is
the biggest industry, must deal with these extremes...........