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Protecting those who protect nature by supporting conservationists’ mental wellbeing

Authors :
Thomas Pienkowski
Aidan Keane
Sofia Castelló y Tickell
Emiel de Lange
Mirjam Hazenbosch
Munib Khanyari
William Arlidge
Gergő Baranyi
Stephanie Brittain
Vena Kapoor
Vik Mohan
Sarah Papworth
Roshni Ravi
Izak Smit
EJ Milner-Gulland
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Biodiversity conservation work can be challenging but rewarding, with potential consequences for conservationists’ mental health. Yet, little is known about patterns of mental health among conservationists and its associated protective and risk factors. A better understanding can help improve working conditions, supporting conservationists’ job satisfaction, productivity, and engagement, while reducing costs from staff turnover, absenteeism, and presenteeism. We surveyed 2311 conservationists across 143 countries, asking about experiences of psychological distress, personal characteristics, and workplace conditions. Moderate or severe distress was reported by 27.8%. Respondents with low dispositional and conservation-specific optimism, poor physical health, limited social support, women, and early-career professionals were most at risk. Heavy workload, job demands, and organisational instability were linked to higher distress, but job stability and satisfaction with one’s contributions to conservation were associated with lower distress. We suggest ways employers and others could support conservationists’ mental health and ability to tackle the global ecological crisis.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cef815e901f641e1b13b0d4f0a06a2ee