The concerned steward effect: Exploring the relationship between climate anxiety, psychological distress, and self-reported climate related behavioural engagement
Lukacs, Julia N., Bratu, Andreea, Adams, Shona, Logie, Carmen, Tokm, Nathaniel, McCunn, Lindsay J., Lem, Melissa, Henley, Arden, Closson, Kalysha, Martin, Gina, Gislason, Maya K., Takaro, Tim and Card, Kiffer G., (2023). The concerned steward effect: Exploring the relationship between climate anxiety, psychological distress, and self-reported climate related behavioural engagement. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 90 102091-n/a
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Sub-type Journal article Author Lukacs, Julia N.
Bratu, Andreea
Adams, Shona
Logie, Carmen
Tokm, Nathaniel
McCunn, Lindsay J.
Lem, Melissa
Henley, Arden
Closson, Kalysha
Martin, Gina
Gislason, Maya K.
Takaro, Tim
Card, Kiffer G.Title The concerned steward effect: Exploring the relationship between climate anxiety, psychological distress, and self-reported climate related behavioural engagement Appearing in Journal of Environmental Psychology Volume 90 Publication Date 2023-09-01 Place of Publication Amesterdam Publisher Elsevier Start page 102091 End page n/a Language eng Abstract Abstract Previous research has demonstrated that heightened levels of climate change anxiety are correlated with psychological distress. Some have argued that engagement in pro-environmental behaviour might be associated with lower levels of climate anxiety and psychological distress. As such, this study aimed to explore the association between pro-environmental behavioural engagement, climate change anxiety, and generalized psychological distress. Participants living in British Columbia, Canada aged 16+ completed a serial cross-sectional online survey. We examined inter-relationships between self-reported Climate-related Behavioural Engagement (BE) scores, Climate Change Anxiety Scale (CCAS) scores, and Kessler Psychological Distress (K6) scores using scatterplots, Spearman Rank Correlation and multivariable linear regression. Among 1553 participants, higher CCAS scores and higher BE scores were both associated with greater psychological distress. An interaction term between these variables indicated that as CCAS scores increased, the effect of self-reported behavioural engagement on psychological distress was attenuated. Findings suggest that self-reported behavioural engagement and climate anxiety are correlated, a phenomenon we refer to as the concerned steward effect. However, the association becomes attenuated among those with high levels of distress, perhaps driven by a diminishing return of behavioural engagement or difficulties of behavioural engagement among those with high distress. Copyright Holder Elsevier Copyright Year 2024 Copyright type All rights reserved DOI 10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102091 -
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