The Effects of Flooding on Mental Health

Back to results
Author(s)
Murray, V., Caldin, H., Amlôt, R., Stanke, C., Lock, S., Rowlatt, H., and Williams, R.
Publication language
English
Pages
127pp
Date published
01 Dec 2011
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Disasters, Floods & landslides, Health, Psychosocial support

The effects of flooding and disasters on people‘s health, relationships and welfare
can be extensive and significant. Flooding can have profound effects on people‘s
welfare, employment, mobility, wellbeing, psychosocial resilience, relationships and
mental health. It can pose huge social and welfare problems that may continue over
extended periods of time because of not only being flooded (the primary stressor),
but also because of the continuing secondary stressors that arise as people try to
recover their lives, property and relationships.

This report is borne out of a publication in 2009 from the Department of Health - New
Horizons: a shared vision of mental health. Its vision states that mental health
problems are common as are mental disorders that spring from environmental as
well as physical and social risks. One of these environmental risks is posed by
disasters, and they include flooding.

As part of the work for New Horizons, the Department of Health asked the Health
Protection Agency to research systematically the public mental health impacts of
flooding, synthesise best practice on their mitigation, and identify where research can
support future evidence-based guidance.

Since then, the present government has published No Health Without Mental Health:
a cross-government mental health outcomes strategy for people of all ages (2011).
That current government policy recognises the importance of psychosocial resilience
and is particularly pertinent to this report and aspects of it are summarised in the first
chapter.

This report reviews the evidence on mental health and flooding. It complements the
interim strategic guidance published by the Department of Health in 2009 – National
Health Service Emergency Planning Guidance: planning for the psychosocial and
mental health care of people affected by major incidents and disasters. That
guidance remains contemporary.

This document provides:
An analytical review of current epidemiological studies related to mental
health and flooding;
A synthesis of a wide range of national and international guidance; and
An analysis of future research needs.

The material presented here provides further evidence on the impacts of floods on
public mental health as well as public health approaches for supporting responses by
specialist mental health services within a wider public mental health framework.

The authors have collected evidence through a systematic review of the literature
that has been published since 2004. It consists of published research data (including
epidemiological, government and non-government data), and guidance published by
the government for England and by NATO. Experts in the field have advised on
research in press or in process as well as on other known sources of information.

This report draws on, and complements approaches suggested in four recent,
substantial documents:
The Mental Health Strategy: No health without mental health (2011);
The Public Health White Paper: Healthy lives, healthy people (2010);
New Horizons: a shared vision for mental health (2009); and
NHS Emergency Planning Guidance: Psychosocial and mental health care
of people affected by major incidents and disasters: Interim national
strategic guidance (2009).