PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Heat-health plans overlook mental health risks

2025-05-29
(Press-News.org) As climate change fuels more frequent and severe heat waves, governments worldwide have adopted Heat-Health Action Plans (HHAPs) to prevent illness and death from heat stroke, heart attacks, and other unwanted physical and mental health outcomes. Yet a new study by researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health reveals a critical gap in these plans: while most acknowledge mental health risks, such as heightened anxiety, depression, and suicide, few propose concrete interventions to protect vulnerable populations.

According to one estimate, exposure to heatwaves globally has doubled since the 1980s.  

The study, the first to systematically assess mental health inclusion in HHAPs worldwide, analyzed 83 plans across 24 countries. While most (75.9 percent) acknowledged mental health broadly, only 31.3 percent specified heat's unique mental health impacts, like increased psychiatric emergencies or suicide risk. Worryingly, just 21.7 percent of HHAPs analyzed outlined concrete interventions, despite evidence that heat worsens outcomes for people with conditions like depression and schizophrenia while triggering new mental health crises. The findings are published in the journal Current Environmental Health Reports(link is external and opens in a new window).

“We are seeing increasing evidence on negative effects of extreme heat on mental health,” says the study’s senior author Robbie Parks, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences at Columbia Mailman School. “Yet when it comes to planning for extreme heat, there is a gap between acknowledging mental health as a concern and identifying interventions to address it.”

Many HHAPs failed to address underlying drivers like heat-induced displacement, economic stress, or sleep disruption and focused on broad measures like public messaging rather than targeted support. For instance, few addressed at-risk groups like homeless individuals or proposed community-based strategies—such as neighbor check-ins—that could reduce isolation during extreme heat events. Notably, India was alone among low- and middle-income countries in addressing mental health, despite these regions facing disproportionate heat risks.

“People with mental health conditions face compounding barriers during heatwaves,” explains lead author Allison Stewart-Ruano, a doctoral candidate in environmental health sciences at Columbia Mailman School. Stewart-Ruano emphasizes the need for multi-level interventions, such as ensuring cool sleeping environments or training communities to support vulnerable neighbors. “Effective plans must bridge clinical and community approaches, combining medical care with social cohesion strategies that reduce isolation during extreme heat events.”

Additional co-authors include Raenita Spriggs, Katherine M. Keyes, and Yoshira Ornelas Van Horne at Columbia Mailman School; Alessandro Massazza at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine; Alexandra Czerniewska at Health Equity and Human Rights LLP; and Alejandro Saez Reale and Joy Shumake-Guillemot at WHO/WMO Joint Office for Climate and Health.

The study is funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health (ES007322, ES033742, AG093975, MH128734).

The authors declare no conflicts.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Rice anthropologists spotlight human toll of glacier loss

2025-05-29
In an important contribution from the social sciences, Rice University anthropologists Cymene Howe and Dominic Boyer examine the societal consequences of global glacier loss in a commentary published today in Science. Their article appears alongside new research that estimates that more than three-quarters of the world’s glacier mass could disappear by the end of the century under current climate policies. While the study projects the physical outcomes of glacial melt, Howe and Boyer highlight the social impacts and human ...

The Career Optimism Special Report™ Series: Moms in the Sandwich Generation, reveals critical insights on the career cost of dual caregiving and the imperative for increased employer support to serve

2025-05-29
Today, University of Phoenix Career Institute® and Motherly released the latest installment in The Career Optimism Special Report™ Series: Moms in the Sandwich Generation, revealing that 51% of sandwich generation moms have left a job due to caregiving responsibilities. This alarming statistic underscores the career-limiting pressure that anyone faces when caring for both children and aging loved ones—as men are also increasingly finding themselves in this role. What’s more, challenges dual-caregivers face are ...

2021’s Hurricane Ida could have been even worse for NYC

2025-05-29
Hoboken, N.J., May 29, 2025 — During the final week of summer in 2021, Hurricane Ida emerged from the Gulf of Mexico, turned almost directly northeast and swept through the South en route to Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. Fueled by unusually heavy rains, falling on ground still saturated by two other recent large storms, Ida would eventually carve a path of destruction through the region. Some New Jersey cities and towns received as many as nine inches of rain within a 24-hour period, ...

Scholastic performance is a key concern for young cancer patients, study finds

2025-05-29
Young patients with cancer need support when it comes to scholastic performance, which can be an empowering and motivating force during the challenges of cancer treatment, UF Health Cancer Center researchers have found. The study, presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 2025 Annual Meeting, identified four areas of support that need to be integrated into adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer care: help with obtaining school accommodations, support with losing extracurricular activities that play a role in identity formation, navigating a disruption in their academic trajectory ...

University of Cincinnati Cancer Center study sheds light on enzyme’s role in driving lymphoma growth

2025-05-29
A study led by University of Cincinnati Cancer Center researchers sheds new light on the mechanisms by which a major oncogene promotes and sustains lymphoma development and progression, paving the way for novel targeted therapies. The research, led by first author Austin C. MacMillan and senior author Tom Cunningham, was published May 29 in the journal Redox Biology. Study background The Cunningham lab focuses on an oncogene called MYC that “turbocharges” the metabolism of cancer cells to fuel their aggressive growth and proliferation. Although many of the numerous individual pathways ...

New chemical engineering application expands possibilities for targeted drug delivery

2025-05-29
A new avenue for targeted drug delivery has been proposed by researchers from The Grainger College of Engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. Their findings, published in Materials Today Bio, report the first successful application of metabolic labeling in platelets. Platelets are anucleate cell fragments that congregate at sites of bleeding and inflammation to clot blood. Their unique properties make them attractive vehicles for targeted drug delivery systems. However, platelets are notoriously difficult ...

New 3D flood visualizations help communities understand rising water risks

2025-05-29
As climate change intensifies extreme weather, two new NYU studies show 3D flood visualizations developed by a cross-institutional research team dramatically outperform traditional maps for communicating risk. When Sunset Park, Brooklyn residents compared both formats that visualized flooding, 92% preferred the dynamic 3D approach. "The challenge we face is that substantial sectors of the population ignore flood warnings and fail to evacuate," said Professor Debra F. Laefer, the NYU Tandon School of Engineering senior researcher involved in both studies who holds appointments in the Civil and Urban Engineering Department and in the Center ...

New Mayo Venture Partner (MVP) program announced to accelerate innovation

2025-05-29
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic’s Business Development team, consistently recognized as one of the top commercialization operations among academic medical centers, is expanding its capabilities through a new initiative: the Mayo Venture Partner (MVP) program. In response to the dynamic and evolving healthcare landscape, Mayo Clinic is enlisting industry veterans to create groundbreaking technologies, co-invest in aligned companies and build new ventures from the ground up. The ...

Solar power system installations impact less than 1 percent of Arkansas’ ag land

2025-05-29
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Large-scale solar power arrays occupy about 0.2 percent of agricultural land in Arkansas, according to an analysis by the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. Solar energy production is increasingly being used to meet both energy needs and zero net emissions goals within the United States. Arkansas is following this trend with several utility-scale solar energy production systems built in 2023 and 2024, and more scheduled to come online in the following years. This has raised some concerns over the displacement of agricultural ...

Ancient tooth enamel proteins reveal hidden diversity in African Paranthropus

2025-05-29
  Analysis of ancient proteins preserved in fossilized tooth enamel reveals insights into the elusive nature of Paranthropus robustus, researchers report. The findings, which challenge long-held assumptions about this early human relative, suggest greater diversity within Paranthropus than previously recognized and support the possibility of multiple distinct species within the genus. While advances in ancient DNA (aDNA) sequencing have enabled valuable insights into the evolutionary relationships of Middle to Late Pleistocene hominins, understanding of earlier Pliocene-Pleistocene species, like Paranthropus, remains limited. This is largely because ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mass General Brigham researchers present key findings at ASCO

Student researchers put UTA on national stage

Hertz Foundation and Breakthrough Energy partner to advance climate and energy solutions

New study reveals how tiny insects detect force

New 3D genome mapping technology sheds light on how plants regulate photosynthesis

Dinosaur eggshell study confirms biogenic origin of secondary eggshell units

Transforming immunotherapy design

New book with a global view of men’s experiences with partner violence

New research recovers evidence for lost mountains from Antarctica’s past

Scientists discover new evidence of intermediate-mass black holes

Predicting underwater landslides before they strike

What will it take to reduce primary care doctor burnout?

Small currents, big impact: Satellite breakthrough reveals hidden ocean forces

Single-atom catalysts change spin state when boosted by a magnetic field

Integrated metasurface for quantum analog computation: A new scheme to phase reconstruction

PolyU research reveals rising soil nitrous acid emissions driven by climate change and fertilisation accelerate global ozone pollution

The EU should allow gene editing to make organic farming more sustainable, researchers say

At-home heart attacks and cardiac deaths on the rise since COVID-19 pandemic

Projected outcomes of removing fluoride from U.S. public water systems

Parental education, own education, and cognitive function in middle-aged and older adults

Sacred moment experiences among internal medicine physicians

Ragon Institute study uncovers how certain antibodies help fight tuberculosis

Mangroves show surprising resilience to storms in a changing climate

Experiences with discrimination may raise rise of early psychotic episodes: NYU study

Common gene variant doubles dementia risk for men

Nutritional priorities to support GLP-1 therapy for obesity

Detecting invisible wounds: New study could change how wound closure is defined

Routine breast cancer screening brings better outcomes for patients

New ACS study: Number of cancer survivors in the U.S. reaches 18.6 million — projected to exceed 22 million by 2035

Innovative immunotherapy shows promise against aggressive T cell cancers

[Press-News.org] Heat-health plans overlook mental health risks