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Updated Jul 7, 2026 · 11:06
Health News Updated Jul 7, 2026

Heat Waves Double Mental Health Admissions in Australian Youth Study

A large Australian study found extreme heat significantly raises mental health hospital admissions among young people. When temperatures hit the top 1%, admission risk doubled in warmer months and tripled in cooler months. The University of Sydney-led study analyzed 720,000 admissions in New South Wales between 2001 and 2022. Researchers project heat-related mental health admissions could rise by 6% to 7.7% by the end of the century.

Australian study warns of rising youth mental health admissions as heat intensifies

Sydney, July 7

Extreme heat significantly increases the risk of hospital admissions for mental health conditions among young people, according to a large Australian study, highlighting a growing public health concern linked to climate change.

"Climate change is already impacting children and young people's mental health in multiple ways," said the study's co-author Cybele Dey, an adolescent psychiatrist with the Sydney Children's Hospitals Network, quoted by the Guardian Australia on Tuesday.

Led by the University of Sydney, the study of 720,000 hospital admissions in the state of New South Wales, involving people aged up to 24 between 2001 and 2022, found that when temperatures hit the top 1 per cent of records, admission risk doubled in warmer months and tripled in cooler months.

The study, published in the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, projects that heat-related mental health admissions could rise by 6 per cent to 7.7 per cent by the end of the century as global temperatures increase, reports Xinhua news agency.

It captures only the most severe cases requiring hospital admission -- such as depression, schizophrenia, substance misuse, eating disorders and self-harm -- and excludes emergency and outpatient visits.

Researchers said the rapid rise in admissions after heat spikes suggests a physiological response, possibly linked to sleep disruption, stress, altered brain function, and increased impulsivity, alcohol or other substance use.

The findings underscore the need to include psychological risks in heat-health planning and policies, according to the Guardian Australia.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Ananya R

The tripling of risk in cooler months is surprising—shows our bodies aren't adapted to sudden heat spikes. In India, with AC use rising, we might be losing natural resilience. Need more tree cover and cooling infrastructure in urban areas.

Rohan X

As someone who works with adolescents in Delhi, this rings true. During peak summer, we see more cases of self-harm and substance use among vulnerable youth. The physiological link via sleep disruption makes total sense. Policymakers, please act. 🙏

Justin A

Important research but correlation isn't causation. Heat might exacerbate underlying issues, but blaming climate change for all mental health admissions feels reductive. Let's also focus on better screening and early intervention.

Sneha F

In India, we already have heat action plans in Ahmedabad and Odisha—but they rarely mention mental health. This study should push NDMA to update guidelines. Also, schools need to be aware. Children can't study in 40°C without AC. 📚🔥

Lisa P

Living in Australia, I can confirm summers are getting brutal. Our governments need to fund more youth mental health services and ensure hospitals are prepared for heatwaves. Glad to see this being discussed.

Karthik V

Interesting that admissions

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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