Summary

Published Date: August 07, 2024

This study aims to identify how individual factors and neighborhood social cohesion are associated with negative mental health effects of exposure to extreme weather events. In this cross-sectional, representative study, authors used data from the 2021 California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) to analyze the association between respondent characteristics and self-report of negative mental health effects following exposure to extreme weather events.

Findings: Researchers found that 53% of the sample reported being affected by climate events, and of these, 22.8% reported a negative impact on their mental health. Respondents who were younger, white, female, college-educated, or living in a rural area were more likely to report adverse mental health effects of climate events for themselves or household members. Individuals who had experienced property damage were much more likely to report negative mental health effects due to climate events.

This study identifies subgroups that may have higher vulnerability to the mental health effects of climate change events. Future research is needed to develop targeted prevention and outreach interventions to these subgroups to build individual- and community-level resilience.