5 Expert Tips for Coping With Eco-Anxiety

Staff
By Staff
2 Min Read

If you’re deeply concerned about the state of the planet — to the point that your anxieties are affecting your life or relationships — you have plenty of company.

Increasingly, psychologists and other mental health experts are talking about “eco-anxiety,” which is a newish term for distress, fear, and other negative emotions brought on by thoughts of climate change and human inaction. Recent surveys of young people have found that more than 45 percent say negative feelings about climate change are impacting their daily life or functioning.
Eco-anxiety isn’t a diagnosable mental health condition, and it’s worth noting that its definition is still evolving in psychological literature. The researcher who coined the term, Glenn Albrecht, called it a persistent fear of environmental doom. Others have described it as “mental distress or anxiety associated with worsening environmental conditions” or “anxiety experienced in response to the ecological crisis.”

Caroline Hickman, PhD, a lecturer and eco-anxiety researcher at the University of Bath in England, notes that eco-anxiety can be mild or more severe.

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