TY - JOUR
T1 - When Climate Anxiety Enters the Therapy Room
T2 - Clinicians Report Lower Confidence, Less Willingness to Help, and Greater Distress
AU - Williamson, Rachel E.
AU - King, Brittany
AU - Raiman, Kenzie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Mary Ann Liebert, (NY) LLC.
PY - 2025/7/14
Y1 - 2025/7/14
N2 - The present study assessed the impact of exposure to a climate-related anxiety vignette, presented as part of a simulated clinical encounter. In total, 150 mental health care professionals were randomly assigned to read one of three vignettes in which a client describes either death anxiety, climate change anxiety, or social anxiety (control). They then completed measures of affect, perceptions of the client, defensiveness of professional identity, and environmental attitudes. ANCOVAs were run to compare outcomes across conditions, controlling for their level of nature connectedness. Clinicians who read the climate vignette reported lower confidence in their ability to help the client and lower desire to work with the client, compared with those responding to the social anxiety vignette. Furthermore, those exposed to the climate vignette reported significantly higher negative affect, compared with those exposed to the death and social anxiety vignette. Findings draw attention to the uniqueness of climate change-related distress as a presenting problem and suggest that mental health care providers may benefit from additional training and reflective practice when working with clients dealing with this shared threat.
AB - The present study assessed the impact of exposure to a climate-related anxiety vignette, presented as part of a simulated clinical encounter. In total, 150 mental health care professionals were randomly assigned to read one of three vignettes in which a client describes either death anxiety, climate change anxiety, or social anxiety (control). They then completed measures of affect, perceptions of the client, defensiveness of professional identity, and environmental attitudes. ANCOVAs were run to compare outcomes across conditions, controlling for their level of nature connectedness. Clinicians who read the climate vignette reported lower confidence in their ability to help the client and lower desire to work with the client, compared with those responding to the social anxiety vignette. Furthermore, those exposed to the climate vignette reported significantly higher negative affect, compared with those exposed to the death and social anxiety vignette. Findings draw attention to the uniqueness of climate change-related distress as a presenting problem and suggest that mental health care providers may benefit from additional training and reflective practice when working with clients dealing with this shared threat.
KW - Climate change—Clinical practice—Death anxiety—Eco-anxiety—Existential threat—Mental health care
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105010738908
U2 - 10.1177/19429347251359619
DO - 10.1177/19429347251359619
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105010738908
SN - 1942-9347
VL - 17
SP - 295
EP - 303
JO - Ecopsychology
JF - Ecopsychology
IS - 4
ER -