Connect with us

World

UK officials recommend yoga and ‘climate cafés’ to combat ‘eco-anxiety’

Published

on

UK officials recommend yoga and ‘climate cafés’ to combat ‘eco-anxiety’

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Britons’ anxiety about climate change plays a big role in many mental health struggles among the country’s youth and can trigger guilt about having children, a new report has claimed.

The report by the United Kingdom Health Security Agency (UKHSA) also suggests that yoga and visiting “climate cafés” could help stave off this “eco-anxiety” and build emotional resilience in times of change.

“An awareness of climate and environmental change can also lead to emotional or psychological responses, such as eco-anxiety,” it reads, defining the term as distress caused by the threat of climate change.

The authors also reference “solastalgia,” which is the sorrow people feel when their familiar environments are degraded by environmental change.

Advertisement

HOT TEA OR ICED COFFEE? STUDY SAYS YOUR CHOICE COULD AFFECT MOOD AND DIGESTION

A UKHSA report on climate anxiety among British youth faces criticism from Jason Isaac, who calls eco-anxiety a product of climate propaganda. (Reuters)

According to the UKHSA, reactions like this are not irrational but are natural responses to a destabilized world.

The data shown in the report, the Climate change and mental health: thematic assessment, also indicates that many young Britons are struggling with the psychological weight of environmental collapse.

For example, nearly 40 percent of survey respondents said that climate change made them hesitant to have children, citing fears about future safety, resources and quality of life.

Advertisement

“There is evidence that eco-anxiety is influencing reproductive choices for some individuals, as 39% of UK survey respondents described that climate change made them feel hesitant to have children due to concerns over the children’s future quality of life,” the report states.

In response to these findings, the UKHSA went on to recommend activities that promote community connection and resilience.

BILL GATES DISCOVERS THE WAY TO FIGHT CLIMATE BATTLE ACTUALLY INVOLVES HELPING HUMANS

The United Kingdom Health Security Agency recommends yoga and climate cafés to help British youth cope with eco-anxiety and build resilience against climate change distress. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

“Participating in group and community-based activities, including yoga, citizen science, and climate cafés, was associated with reduced psychological distress,” the report notes.

Advertisement

The report has not escaped criticism, with Jason Isaac, CEO of the American Energy Institute, accusing the UK government of institutionalizing climate hysteria.

“The UK’s embrace of fringe terms like ‘eco-anxiety’ and ‘solastalgia’ shows how deeply climate propaganda has seeped into official policy,” he told the National Review.

Isaac argues that these are not legitimate medical conditions but rather the result of fear-driven messaging that makes people feel guilty about prosperity and family life.

“No climate café or government program will solve a mental health crisis created by the Left’s own apocalyptic narrative,” he added.

SURVEY SCHOOL ADMINS DON’T WANT YOU TO SEE ASKS YOUNG CHILDREN ABOUT GENDER IDENTITY, CLIMATE CHANGE FEARS

Advertisement

Billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates surprised social media users this week when he wrote that climate change does not represent a doomsday scenario for earth. (Bennett Raglin/Getty)

Similarly, Bill Gates, also took a step away from climate alarmism and said he thinks climate change and global warming are both issues that “will not lead to humanity’s demise.”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Despite the controversy, the UKHSA maintains that addressing the psychological effects of climate change is essential to public health.

Advertisement

World

DR Congo says 1,307 Ebola cases confirmed, including 377 deaths

Published

on

DR Congo says 1,307 Ebola cases confirmed, including 377 deaths

Outbreak spreads to a fourth province, Haut-Uele, bordering South Sudan and the CAR, according to a media report.

⁠The Democratic Republic ⁠of the Congo (DRC) says confirmed ‌Ebola cases in the country have reached 1,307 and include ⁠377 deaths.

In an update issued late on Monday, the country said the confirmed cases ⁠have been ⁠recorded ⁠in three provinces – Ituri, ‌North Kivu and ‌South ‌Kivu.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

The announcement comes as the AFP news agency reported that a case has been detected in a fourth province. A source at the DRC’s National Institute of Biomedical Research (INRB) quoted by AFP said the viral haemorrhagic fever has spread to Haut-Uele, which borders South Sudan and the Central African Republic.

Advertisement

The source said the case there was detected after an infected person travelled from Bunia, Ituri’s capital, to Haut-Uele.

That person has since died, another health source told AFP.

Authorities are now trying to trace the chain of transmission and identify contacts.

Its spread to Haut-Uele means the DRC’s entire northeast, home to about 15 million people, is now affected.

The conflict-hit province of Ituri is the epicentre of the country’s latest Ebola outbreak, its 17th, which started in May.

Advertisement

In many cases, the virus has spread at funerals, where the highly infectious bodies of Ebola victims are handled.

For weeks, aid workers, facing mistrust among local communities, have struggled to plan safe burials in affected areas to prevent contact with the dead.

In the DRC, funerals often last several days, during which family members and friends touch the body of the deceased.

Reporting from a treatment centre in Rwampara in Ituri province, Al Jazeera’s Catherine Wambua-Soi said health workers often lack sufficient equipment.

“These centres have been attacked several times. Last month, tents here were set on fire by an angry mob. Some Congolese still distrust those trying to help,” she said.

Advertisement

“They need more of everything: protective gear, medicines, rapid test kits … and body bags.”

On Saturday, the government issued a ban on public gatherings in four ⁠provinces, including the country’s capital, Kinshasa, as it continues to battle the spread of the outbreak.

That order was issued before a planned protest in Kinshasa on July 8 against constitutional reform, and opposition figures have called the ban “politically motivated.”

Continue Reading

World

Russia's ruling party runs Ukraine war veteran among lead candidates for September election

Published

on

Russia's ruling party runs Ukraine war veteran among lead candidates for September election
Russia’s ruling party on Sunday announced it would run an injured Ukraine war veteran and a television war correspondent, alongside ​the country’s foreign minister and the mayor of Moscow, as ‌lead candidates in a parliamentary election due in September.
Continue Reading

World

Gunman kills 6 at youth welfare facility in suspected child custody dispute: reports

Published

on

Gunman kills 6 at youth welfare facility in suspected child custody dispute: reports

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A suspect is in custody after six people were shot and killed Monday at a youth welfare facility in northern Germany, officials said.

The shooting happened around midday in Stade, a town of about 50,000 people near Hamburg. Authorities said the victims — four women and two men — all worked at the youth center or affiliated organizations. Five were pronounced dead at the scene, while a sixth died later at a hospital, according to The Associated Press, citing authorities.

Several others were wounded in the shooting, which may have been tied to a child custody dispute, the outlet reported.

2 PEOPLE ARE KILLED IN A KNIFE ATTACK IN GERMANY; SCHOLZ SAYS THERE MUST BE CONSEQUENCES

Advertisement

The shooting happened around midday in Stade, a town of about 50,000 people near Hamburg. (News5/Reuters)

Police said the shooting happened at a facility on Dankersstrasse that houses pregnant women and young mothers with children, according to The Associated Press.

The suspect, a 45-year-old man, had an appointment at the facility earlier in the day before the shooting unfolded around midday. His 3-month-old daughter and the child’s mother were safe, Reuters reported.

The suspected gunman was arrested. Police said two others were also subject to police measures on suspicion of involvement but did not provide additional details, according to The Associated Press.

CHILDREN AMONG 6 WOUNDED IN MARYLAND MASS SHOOTING AS DETECTIVES WORK TO DETERMINE WHAT OCCURRED

Advertisement

Authorities said the victims — four women and two men — all worked at the youth center or affiliated organizations.  (News5/Reuters)

German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said he was “deeply shocked” by the violence at a place meant to protect women and children.

“The horrific act of violence in Stade claimed the lives of six people today. I am deeply shaken by the extent of the violence in a place that is meant to provide protection,” Steinmeier said. 

“My condolences go to the families of the dead and injured, who must endure so much pain. My thanks go to all first responders and doctors.”

SUSPECT ‘NEUTRALIZED’ AFTER MONTREAL SHOOTING LEAVES AT LEAST 2 DEAD INCLUDING OFFICER

Advertisement

Police warned people to avoid the area after the shooting but later said there was no danger to the public. (News5/Reuters)

Police warned people to avoid the area after the shooting but later said there was no danger to the public. Investigators were still collecting evidence Monday evening, Reuters reported.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Mass shootings in Germany are rare.

Earlier this year, a car plowed into a pedestrian zone in Leipzig, Germany, killing two people and leaving several others seriously injured.

Advertisement

Stade Police could not immediately be reached by Fox News Digital for comment.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending