Australians report climate change as a bigger concern than COVID-19 - 06/12/21

Doi : 10.1016/j.joclim.2021.100032 
Rebecca Patrick , a , Rhonda Garad b, Tristan Snell c, Joanne Enticott b, Graham Meadows d
a School of Health and Social Development, Deakin University Australia, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, VIC 3125, Australia 
b Monash Centre for Health Research and Implementation, Monash University Australia, Australia 
c School of Psychology, Deakin University Australia, Australia 
d Department of Psychiatry, School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health, Monash University Australia, Australia 

Corresponding author.

Bienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
Artículo gratuito.

Conéctese para beneficiarse!

Highlights

Australians experienced two public health crises in 2020 – catastrophic bushfires and COVID-19 pandemic.
During peak impact of the pandemic, concern about climate change significantly exceeded COVID-19.
There is widespread, persistent and high-level of climate change concern in Australia (regardless of socio-economic characteristics).

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Abstract

Australia experienced two public health emergencies in 2020 – the catastrophic bushfires and the global coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Whilst these were separate events, both have similar drivers arising from human pressures on the natural environment. Here we report on relative personal concerns of Australians in a survey implemented during the global COVID-19 pandemic.

The study design was a cross sectional online survey administered between 11 August and 11 November 2020. The setting was an Australia-wide online population involving 5483 individuals aged ≥18 residing in Australia. Recruitment occurred in two stages: unrestricted self-selected community sample through mainstream and social media (N = 4089); and purposeful sampling using an online panel company (N = 1055). The sample was predominantly female (N = 3187); mean age of 52.7 years; and approximately representative of adults in Australia for age, location, state and area disadvantage (IRSD quintiles). Climate change was very much a problem for 66.3% of the sample, while COVID-19 was ranked at the same level by only 25.3%. Three times as many participants reported that climate change was very much a problem than COVID-19, despite responding at a time when Australians were experiencing Stage 2 through 4 lockdowns. Demographic differences relating to relative personal concerns are discussed. Even in the midst of the uncertainty of a public health pandemic, Australians report that climate change is their most significant personal problem. Australia needs to apply an evidence-based public health approach to climate change, like it did for the pandemic, which will address the climate change concerns of Australians.

El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Climate change, Public health, Coronavirus


Esquema


© 2021  The Author(s). Publicado por Elsevier Masson SAS. Todos los derechos reservados.
Añadir a mi biblioteca Eliminar de mi biblioteca Imprimir
Exportación

    Exportación citas

  • Fichero

  • Contenido

Vol 3

Artículo 100032- août 2021 Regresar al número
Artículo precedente Artículo precedente
  • Advocacy messages about climate and health are more effective when they include information about risks, solutions, and a normative appeal: Evidence from a conjoint experiment
  • John Kotcher, Lauren Feldman, Kate T. Luong, James Wyatt, Edward Maibach
| Artículo siguiente Artículo siguiente
  • The impacts of climate change on displaced populations: A call for action
  • Ayman Ahmed, Nouh Saad Mohamed, Emmanuel Edwar Siddig, Talha Algaily, Suad Sulaiman, Yousif Ali

Bienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.

Mi cuenta


Declaración CNIL

EM-CONSULTE.COM se declara a la CNIL, la declaración N º 1286925.

En virtud de la Ley N º 78-17 del 6 de enero de 1978, relativa a las computadoras, archivos y libertades, usted tiene el derecho de oposición (art.26 de la ley), el acceso (art.34 a 38 Ley), y correcta (artículo 36 de la ley) los datos que le conciernen. Por lo tanto, usted puede pedir que se corrija, complementado, clarificado, actualizado o suprimido información sobre usted que son inexactos, incompletos, engañosos, obsoletos o cuya recogida o de conservación o uso está prohibido.
La información personal sobre los visitantes de nuestro sitio, incluyendo su identidad, son confidenciales.
El jefe del sitio en el honor se compromete a respetar la confidencialidad de los requisitos legales aplicables en Francia y no de revelar dicha información a terceros.


Todo el contenido en este sitio: Copyright © 2024 Elsevier, sus licenciantes y colaboradores. Se reservan todos los derechos, incluidos los de minería de texto y datos, entrenamiento de IA y tecnologías similares. Para todo el contenido de acceso abierto, se aplican los términos de licencia de Creative Commons.