x

Like our Facebook Page

   
Early Times Newspaper Jammu, Leading Newspaper Jammu
 
Breaking News :   Sports shape individuals, play vital role in nation-building: LG Sinha | Differences emerge in Cong over party's role in budget session | Digital arrest horror drains elderly couple of Rs 48 lakh | Infiltration biggest challenge for Bengal: PM Modi | PM flags off India’s first Vande Bharat sleeper train | Use technology for welfare of society: Bhagwat | Al-Falah University hired doctors without police verification: ED | Ex-Police employee booked for duping aspirants of Rs 23 lakh | Tourist arrivals picking up in J&K: Chief Secy Atal Dulloo | Republic Day Parade: 30 Tableaux to roll down Kartavya Path | ‘Air pollution increases risk of eye infection’ | 4 Kg Charas recovered, 3 arrested | Rashtrapati Bhavan to remain closed for public visits | IMD forecasts spells of wet weather | Rs 1,975.16 lakh approved for ‘Tawi Bridge’ | Basant Panchami celebrations commence at Mathwar Dev Sthan | Pradeep Sharma called Rohingya, Bangladeshi illegal immigrants a threat to the country | UCO Bank reports strong financial performance for December 2025 Quarter | Valour, sacrifice of Namdhari sect to be remembered: Hardeep Singh Mundian | Silence as Inner Discipline, Scientific and Spiritual Energy | Organic fruit farming: A pathway to safe food, healthy soil, farmer prosperity | Stadium to Classrooms | Surinder Choudhary, Satish Sharma inaugurate border sports festival 2026 at Nowshera | DFCCIL: Review meeting on the Vaitarna-JNPT section concludes | Four years after sewerage works, Ekta Vihar -Rehmati Road in Udhampur remains in shambles | Sakeena Itoo addresses National Technical Conclave on ISM | Amit mentions Census 2027 a founding pillar of Viksit Bharat | Reasi police arrests drug peddler | Information Veterans moun demise of their colleague, Thakur Singh | Gupta assures women's delegation of continued development push and tourism boost for Border Belt of Jammu District | Samba police recovered stolen ‘Khair’ wooden logs | DIG Udhampur-Reasi range and SSP Udhampur decorate newly promoted selection grade constables | S. Manjit Singh urges Industries Dept to allot plots to Jatts | CJ praised UP, said - Whichever state I go to, I will give UP government's example | Haryana and British Columbia Explore Strategic Cooperation in Clean Energy, Trade and Technology | Strict action against land lease irregularities: Chief Minister | Digital policing strengthens citizen safety and transparency - ACS Home, Dr. Sumita Misra | Street Play - Raises Awareness on Global Interventional Radiology Day- 16th January | Udhampur Police books violator for using VPN on mobile phone | War memorial set up in JK's Rajouri to honour fallen heroes of Operation Sindoor | NIA court refuses to discharge accused linked to gangster Dawood Ibrahim's aide in FICN case | Delhi Traffic Police issues over 2,100 challans during Jan 16 enforcement drive | 'Ram Katha' living medium for disseminating timeless values: Vice President | JK BJP holds meeting in Jammu ahead of national president election | Director Information, DIPR Employees condole tragic demise of former officer Thakur Singh | 1 missing girl traced and reunited with family by Jammu (Rural) police in Pargwal area | CM digitally releases over Rs. 858 crore under key welfare schemes; Major Push to Women Empowerment, Farmers' Prosperity and Household Welfare | Educational institutions must actively nurture sporting talent: CM Yogi | Samrat Singh wins historic gold medal at 39th Sub-Junior National Taekwondo Championship | ICCR Zonal Director visits National Institute of Ayurveda, Panchkula | 3rd Chancellor's Trophy (Men & Women) Championship 2025-26 tnters third day at University of Jammu | GDC Thannamandi concludes two-week capacity building training course under Mission YUVA | Back Issues  
 
news details
Impact of climate crisis on emotional health
10/16/2025 8:52:12 PM
Vijay Garg

Climate change is not just an environmental problem or economic challenge. It’s also a mental health crisis that affects the poorest people in the world. Tackling climate change is important to prevent weather shocks.
The rising temperatures caused by climate change can directly affect the emotional health of millions around the world. Scientists say weather conditions such as temperature, humidity and sunlight can affect your mood, energy, and cognitive functions. Excessive temperatures often spoil mood, while moderate, sunny conditions can improve mood. Some people, including the elderly and those with mental illness, may be more susceptible to climate change. may experience symptoms such as irritability, migraine and insomnia
Climate change and extreme weather events can have negative effects on mental health, increasing stress, anxiety, depression and PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder). A large study of social media data has shown that people become much more irritable in extreme heat. Researchers reviewed 1.2 billion social media posts from 157 countries. These were all posted during 2019. He used advanced computer programs to analyze posts written in 65 different languages and scored each post based on whether it was positive or negative.
Researchers matched people’s mood scores with local weather data to see how temperatures affected their online conversations. The results were clear and the same all over the world. When the temperature went above 35 degrees Celsius, people in low-income countries got about 25 percent more negative posts. Negativity increased by about 8 percent in rich countries. Social media data provides us with an unprecedented glimpse into human emotions across different cultures and continents, said Jianghao Wang, a scientist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. This data helps us measure the emotional impacts of climate change that are not possible with traditional surveys. It gives us real-time information on how temperatures affect human emotions around the world.
The researchers separated countries based on income levels using World Bank data, whose dividend line was set at $13,845 per person per year. Emotional responses to heat were more pronounced in countries below this threshold than rich ones. It’s logical considering that rich countries have more air conditioning and better health care. They have a strong infrastructure to deal with extreme weather.
Our study shows that rising temperatures are not only a threat to physical health or economic productivity, but also affect the daily emotions of people around the world, said Siki Zheng from MIT. The AI system used by researchers can understand the emotional accent of text written in dozens of languages, making it possible to compare emotions across different cultures and countries.
The researchers were not limited to the current circumstances. He used climate models to predict how extreme heat could affect human emotions by 2100. assuming that people will adapt to higher temperatures in some way over time He estimated that by the end of the century, emotional well-being would deteriorate by 2.3 percent. Nick O’Bradovich, a scientist at the Sustainable Urbanisation Lab in Tulsa, U.S., said it is clear from our current study and previous findings that climate changes emotions globally. As the weather and climate change, helping individuals become more resilient to shocks in their emotional state will be an important component of overall social adaptation, he said. In fact, this research opens up entirely new ways of thinking about climate change. Most studies focus on physical health impacts, economic damage or environmental destruction. But this research shows that rising temperatures also affect our psychological health, creating a kind of emotional pollution that spreads across the planet. There are some limitations to this study. Social media users do not fully represent everyone Young children and older people use this platform less than other age groups. The irony is that these people are often the most susceptible to extreme heat, which means the actual emotional impact of hot weather can be more severe than the effects shown in studies.
The research comes from the Global Sentiment Project of MIT’s Sustainable Urbanisation Lab. Scientists have made their entire dataset available to other researchers. Hopefully it will help communities and policymakers prepare for a world that is constantly warming
Scientists have made their entire dataset available to other researchers. Hopefully it will help communities and policymakers prepare for a world that is constantly warming. We hope this resource will help researchers, policymakers and communities better prepare for a warmer world, Zhang said.
As global temperatures rise, understanding these emotional effects becomes even more important. The study shows that climate change is not just an environmental problem or economic challenge. It’s also a mental health crisis that affects the poorest people in the world. Tackling climate change is important to prevent weather shocks.
Vijay Garg Retired Principal Malout Punjab
  Share This News with Your Friends on Social Network  
  Comment on this Story  
 
 
 
Early Times Android App
STOCK UPDATE
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
Home About Us Top Stories Local News National News Sports News Opinion Editorial ET Cetra Advertise with Us ET E-paper
 
 
J&K RELATED WEBSITES
J&K Govt. Official website
Jammu Kashmir Tourism
JKTDC
Mata Vaishnodevi Shrine Board
Shri Amarnath Ji Shrine Board
Shri Shiv Khori Shrine Board
UTILITY
Train Enquiry
IRCTC
Matavaishnodevi
BSNL
Jammu Kashmir Bank
State Bank of India
PUBLIC INTEREST
Passport Department
Income Tax Department
JK CAMPA
JK GAD
IT Education
Web Site Design Services
EDUCATION
Jammu University
Jammu University Results
JKBOSE
Kashmir University
IGNOU Jammu Center
SMVDU