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📄 ResearchJuly 8, 2026

Climate Change, Place, and Mental Health in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Multi-Country Analysis of Lived Experiences Following Extreme Weather Events

Background: Climate change is an escalating global health threat, with sub-Saharan Africa disproportionately affected due to entrenched spatial inequalities, high exposure to environmental hazards, and limited adaptive capacity. Increasingly frequent extreme weather events (EWEs), including floods and cyclones, are reshaping the material and social conditions of place, with implications for mental health and wellbeing. However, evidence remains limited, particularly multi-country qualitative research that examines how mental health impacts are produced through lived experiences of place in contexts of recurring environmental disruption and structural vulnerability. This study explored the mental health and wellbeing impacts of EWEs among individuals with lived experience of such events in Mozambique, Burkina Faso, South Africa, and Kenya, using participatory methods that centred community narratives and place-based accounts of everyday life. Methods: This qualitative study employed digital storytelling as a participatory visual method to examine how EWEs are experienced and narrated across diverse socio-spatial contexts. A total of 37 participants (8 to 10 per country) were recruited from rural, peri-urban, and informal urban settlements with recent exposure to flooding or cyclone events. Participants produced digital stories during facilitated five-day workshops. These narratives were analysed using inductive and deductive thematic analysis informed by Braun and Clarke's framework, with attention to the spatial and relational production of distress and coping. Results: Across Mozambique, Burkina Faso, South Africa, and Kenya, findings show that the mental health impacts of EWEs are deeply embedded in place-based conditions and are cyclical, cumulative, and relational rather than confined to discrete disaster events. Participants described how repeated environmental disruptions reconfigured everyday life in place, generating ongoing uncertainty, anticipatory anxiety during rainfall periods, and acute fear during floods and cyclones. Loss of housing, livelihoods, infrastructure, and social anchors of place contributed to enduring psychological distress, which was frequently reactivated by subsequent environmental cues such as heavy rain, wind, and deteriorating physical environments. Persistent anxiety, hypervigilance, sleep disturbance, and emotional distress were reported across all sites. While social and community networks constituted critical infrastructures of care within place, these were often simultaneously overwhelmed as entire communities experienced shared disruption. Limited and delayed institutional responses further compounded spatial and social precarity. Conclusions: This study provides a comparative participatory account of how EWEs shape mental health through their embeddedness in place across diverse sub-Saharan African contexts. The findings demonstrate that psychological distress is produced through the interaction of repeated environmental exposure, structural inequality, and disrupted place-based infrastructures of daily life, rather than emerging solely as a post-disaster outcome. These results underscore the need for climate-responsive mental health and psychosocial support that is integrated into place-based disaster risk governance, alongside strengthened social protection and community infrastructure that can sustain wellbeing in contexts of recurring environmental instability.

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Source

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.06.25.26356208v1?rss=1