Urban Mental Health
City life is surfaced by many jobs and educational opportunities, but there may be violence and unforeseen accidents. Modern life is matched by increasing levels of immigration, concentration of air pollution, substance abuse and the widespread use of the internet and smartphones replacing human contact.

All these factors have now been aggravated by the COVID-19 pandemic. On top of the forced immigration and the risk of new epidemics, on the social side it has seen the return of nationalism and reinforcing sexist and stigma against women, ethnic groups, and sex minorities in some countries. The increasing social disparities already existing in many countries were accentuated by the economic changes caused by the pandemic.

How can all these changes affect a population’s mental health in big cities? This WPA section will be directed to catalyse global actions in the field including coordination of research, training activities and position statements for scientific dissemination.
Section Officers
Chair
officer
Jair de Jesus Mari
star
Universidade Federal de São Paulo Department of Psychiatry, Rua Major Maragliano, 241 Vila Mariana São Paulo. SP
location
CEP 04017-030, Brazil
Contact here
Co-Chair
officer
Norman Sartorius
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President, Association for the Improvement of Mental Health Programmes, 14, Chemin Colladon 1209 Geneva
location
Switzerland
Contact here
Secretary
officer
Takahiro A. Kato
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Professor and Chair, Department of Psychiatry, Hokkaido University Graduate School of Medicine, North 15 West 7, Sapporo 060-8648
location
Japan
Contact here


Section member list can be found here
Section activities

Webinar Title: Climate Psychiatry in Urban Cities

Webinar Date & Time: 14th July 2025, 11-13.00 (GMT)

Presenters:

  • Afzal Javed
    Chairman, Pakistan Psychiatric Research Centre, Fountain House, Lahore, Pakistan
    (Urbanisation, Climate Change & Mental Health)
  • Nan Ji
    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
    (Climate Change, Air Pollution, and Mental Health)
  • Simone Hauck
    Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
    (The Impact of the May 2024 Major Flood in Southern Brazil on Mental Health: A Longitudinal Study)

Discussants:

  • Kua Ee Heok (Singapore)
  • Roy Kallivayalil (India)

More information can be found here.

Join the webinar via Zoom here.