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Journal Article

Citation

Sugg MM, Runkle JD, Hajnos SN, Green S, Michael KD. Sci. Total Environ. 2022; 806(Pt 1): e150391.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.150391

PMID

34844328

PMCID

PMC8455091

Abstract

Little research has examined the mental health risks of concurrent disasters. For example, disasters like wildfires have been shown to have a strong association with psychological symptoms-the 2020 U.S. Western wildfire season was the worst on record and occurred while the country was still navigating the COVID-19 pandemic. We implemented two quasi-experimental analyses, an interrupted time series analysis, and a difference-in-difference analysis to evaluate the impacts of wildfires and COVID-19 on mental health crisis help-seeking patterns. Both methods showed no statistical association between exposure to wildfires and the seeking of mental health support during the COVID-19 pandemic.

RESULTS highlighted that 2020 wildfires were not associated with an acute increase in crisis texts for youth in the two months after the events, likely due to an already elevated text volume in response to the COVID-19 pandemic from March 2020 throughout the fall wildfire season (Aug to Oct 2020). Future research is needed outside of the context of the pandemic to understand the effects of extreme and concurrent climatic events on adolescent mental health, and targeted interventions are required to ensure youth and adolescents are receiving adequate support during these types of crisis events.


Language: en

Keywords

Climate change; Mental health; Compounding disasters; Crisis events; Quasi-experimental research design

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