Climate change has already become a growing worldwide threat with extensive effects on the mental health, but the dimensions and dispersion of this liability need to be synthesized in detail. The systematic review and meta-analysis review is based on evidence of 49 studies of 25 countries (2000-2025) adhering to PRISMA. Random-effects meta-analyses found significant pooled prevalence estimates of post-traumatic stress disorder (23.23%), depression (28.41%), anxiety (31.14%), and psychological stress (31.94%) with high heterogeneity between studies. The increased vulnerability was observed among women, low-income groups, people whose livelihoods depended on climate, and Indigenous groups, whereas resilience was linked to social support, self-efficacy, and cultural practices. The results indicate that climate change is a vital risk factor of mental health disorders on the international level, as there is a pressing need to incorporate mental health protections into climate change adaptation strategies and specific measures of vulnerable groups.
Niazi et al. (Thu,) studied this question.