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Climate change will affect people’s mental health in 10 years’ time just as much as unemployment or pandemics, a poll suggests.
The survey of 2,093 adults in the UK, for the Royal College of Psychiatrists, found that 84% think climate and ecological emergencies will affect mental health in a decade at least as much as unemployment (83%) or a pandemic (84%).
Some 60% said climate issues are affecting their mental health now and will continue to do so in the future.
However, the poll found that a proportion of people do not believe that climate change may have been a contributing factor in the Covid-19 pandemic.
Who We Are
Stop/Play
Principal Investigator
Argyris Stringaris, MD, PhD, FRCPsych is a Senior Investigator at NIMH who researches and treats depression and related conditions in young people. He is also Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Georgetown University. He trained in Child & Adolescent Psychiatry at the Maudsley Hospital in London and received his PhD from the Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London. He served as an Attending Physician (Consultant Psychiatrist) at the National and Specialist Mood Disorder Clinic at the Maudsley and was a Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Psychiatry. He held an advanced Wellcome Trust fellowship and his research was funded by the National Institute of Health Research and the UK Biomedical Centre. His work on mood disorders has been awarded the 2014 Klingenstein Foundation Prize by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and the 2010 Research Prize from the European Psychiatric Association (EPA). His most recent b
Thanks to the rise of video conferencing – and unprecedented scrutiny of how we look – business is booming.
But for the past 12 months, Dr Esho and his staff have seen a new sort of client walk through the door, clients with demands he cannot, and will not, meet. People used to bring in pictures of celebrities they wanted to look like, he says. Now they send me digitally manipulated images of their own faces – pictures they ve altered themselves.
Giulia is pictured left as she normally looks and right and right with her hair lighter and her lips bigger
The new clientele is young. Most are women in their 20s. And they want to look like their edited photographs on Instagram and Snapchat.
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A string of mysterious “directed-energy” attacks on American national security and diplomatic personnel in other countries has raised red flags, and the most recent attacks have hit targets inside the U.S.
Previously, the mysterious “attacks” affected government employees overseas. The U.S. Embassy in Havana was targeted first when scores of diplomats reported similar symptoms of headaches, dizziness, and nausea. Later, medical examinations found some of the diplomats had suffered brain damage.
There were similar incidents in Moscow and the Czech Republic. A panel of experts concluded that the incidents were “directed-energy” attacks using microwaves, but many scientists have been skeptical.