Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice

Climate change is disproportionally impacting the Circumpolar North, with particular impacts among Indigenous populations. Environmental changes are felt in many aspects of daily life of Northern communities, including both physical and mental health. Thus, health institutions from around the Arctic...

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Published in:Transcultural Psychiatry
Main Authors: Lebel, Laurence, Paquin, Vincent, Kenny, Tiff-Annie, Fletcher, Christopher, Nadeau, Lucie, Chachamovich, Eduardo, Lemire, Mélanie
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Sage 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/106805
https://doi.org/10.1177/13634615211066698
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spelling ftunivlavalcorp:oai:corpus.ulaval.ca:20.500.11794/106805 2024-06-23T07:49:47+00:00 Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice Lebel, Laurence Paquin, Vincent Kenny, Tiff-Annie Fletcher, Christopher Nadeau, Lucie Chachamovich, Eduardo Lemire, Mélanie Arctique 2022-12-14T13:34:40Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/106805 https://doi.org/10.1177/13634615211066698 eng eng Sage 1363-4615 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/106805 doi:10.1177/13634615211066698 34989262 http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Arctic regions Climate change Indigenous peoples Mental health Resilience Autochtones -- Santé mentale Inuits -- Santé mentale Climat -- Changements Résilience (Trait de personnalité) article de synthèse 2022 ftunivlavalcorp https://doi.org/20.500.11794/10680510.1177/13634615211066698 2024-06-10T23:42:53Z Climate change is disproportionally impacting the Circumpolar North, with particular impacts among Indigenous populations. Environmental changes are felt in many aspects of daily life of Northern communities, including both physical and mental health. Thus, health institutions from around the Arctic must meet emerging needs, while the phenomenon remains marginal to their southern counterparts. In this systematic review, we aimed to review current scientific knowledge on the mental health impacts of climate change in Indigenous Peoples across the Circumpolar North. Seven databases were searched. Original peer-reviewed research articles were included if they addressed links between climate change and mental health in Arctic or Subarctic Indigenous Populations. After extraction, data were synthesized using thematic analysis. Of the 26 articles that met inclusion criteria, 16 focused on Canadian Inuit communities and 21 were exclusively qualitative. Being on the land was identified as a central determinant of wellbeing. Immediate impacts of climate change on mental health were felt through restricted mobility and disrupted livelihoods. Effects on mental health were further felt through changes in culture and identity, food insecurity, interpersonal stress and conflicts, and housing problems. Various ways in how communities and individuals are coping with these effects were reported. Understanding climate-related pathways of mental health risks in the Arctic is crucial to better identify vulnerable groups and to foster resilience. Clinicians can play a role in recognizing and providing support for patients affected by these disruptions. Policies sensitive to the climate–mental health relationship must be advocated for. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Arctique* Climate change inuit inuits Subarctic Université Laval: CorpusUL Arctic Transcultural Psychiatry 59 3 312 336
institution Open Polar
collection Université Laval: CorpusUL
op_collection_id ftunivlavalcorp
language English
topic Arctic regions
Climate change
Indigenous peoples
Mental health
Resilience
Autochtones -- Santé mentale
Inuits -- Santé mentale
Climat -- Changements
Résilience (Trait de personnalité)
spellingShingle Arctic regions
Climate change
Indigenous peoples
Mental health
Resilience
Autochtones -- Santé mentale
Inuits -- Santé mentale
Climat -- Changements
Résilience (Trait de personnalité)
Lebel, Laurence
Paquin, Vincent
Kenny, Tiff-Annie
Fletcher, Christopher
Nadeau, Lucie
Chachamovich, Eduardo
Lemire, Mélanie
Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
topic_facet Arctic regions
Climate change
Indigenous peoples
Mental health
Resilience
Autochtones -- Santé mentale
Inuits -- Santé mentale
Climat -- Changements
Résilience (Trait de personnalité)
description Climate change is disproportionally impacting the Circumpolar North, with particular impacts among Indigenous populations. Environmental changes are felt in many aspects of daily life of Northern communities, including both physical and mental health. Thus, health institutions from around the Arctic must meet emerging needs, while the phenomenon remains marginal to their southern counterparts. In this systematic review, we aimed to review current scientific knowledge on the mental health impacts of climate change in Indigenous Peoples across the Circumpolar North. Seven databases were searched. Original peer-reviewed research articles were included if they addressed links between climate change and mental health in Arctic or Subarctic Indigenous Populations. After extraction, data were synthesized using thematic analysis. Of the 26 articles that met inclusion criteria, 16 focused on Canadian Inuit communities and 21 were exclusively qualitative. Being on the land was identified as a central determinant of wellbeing. Immediate impacts of climate change on mental health were felt through restricted mobility and disrupted livelihoods. Effects on mental health were further felt through changes in culture and identity, food insecurity, interpersonal stress and conflicts, and housing problems. Various ways in how communities and individuals are coping with these effects were reported. Understanding climate-related pathways of mental health risks in the Arctic is crucial to better identify vulnerable groups and to foster resilience. Clinicians can play a role in recognizing and providing support for patients affected by these disruptions. Policies sensitive to the climate–mental health relationship must be advocated for.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Lebel, Laurence
Paquin, Vincent
Kenny, Tiff-Annie
Fletcher, Christopher
Nadeau, Lucie
Chachamovich, Eduardo
Lemire, Mélanie
author_facet Lebel, Laurence
Paquin, Vincent
Kenny, Tiff-Annie
Fletcher, Christopher
Nadeau, Lucie
Chachamovich, Eduardo
Lemire, Mélanie
author_sort Lebel, Laurence
title Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
title_short Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
title_full Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
title_fullStr Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
title_full_unstemmed Climate change and Indigenous mental health in the Circumpolar North : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
title_sort climate change and indigenous mental health in the circumpolar north : a systematic review to inform clinical practice
publisher Sage
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/106805
https://doi.org/10.1177/13634615211066698
op_coverage Arctique
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctique*
Climate change
inuit
inuits
Subarctic
genre_facet Arctic
Arctique*
Climate change
inuit
inuits
Subarctic
op_relation 1363-4615
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/106805
doi:10.1177/13634615211066698
34989262
op_rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11794/10680510.1177/13634615211066698
container_title Transcultural Psychiatry
container_volume 59
container_issue 3
container_start_page 312
op_container_end_page 336
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