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Main Authors: Neelam, Maheshwari, Bhui, Kamaldeep, Cowan, Trent, Freitag, Brian
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.05745
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author Neelam, Maheshwari
Bhui, Kamaldeep
Cowan, Trent
Freitag, Brian
author_facet Neelam, Maheshwari
Bhui, Kamaldeep
Cowan, Trent
Freitag, Brian
contents This study examines how the desiccation of Utah Great Salt Lake GSL, exacerbated by anthropogenic changes, poses significant health risks, particularly communities mental health. Reduced water inflow has exposed the lakebed, increasing airborne particulate matter PM2.5 and dust storms, which impact air quality. By integrating diverse datasets spanning from 1980 to present including insitu measurements, satellite imagery, and reanalysis products this study synthesizes hydrological, atmospheric, and epidemiological variables to comprehensively track the extent of the GSL surface water, local air quality fluctuations, and their effects on community mental health. The findings indicate a clear relationship between higher pollution days and more severe depressive symptoms. Specifically, individuals exposed to 22 days with PM2.5 levels above the World Health Organizations 24 hour guideline of 15 ug per m3 were more likely to experience severe depressive symptoms. Our results also suggest that people experiencing more severe depression not only face a higher number of high pollution days but also encounter such days more frequently. The study highlights the interconnectedness of poor air quality, environmental degradation and mental health emphasizing the need for more sustainable economic growth in the region.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_05745
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Diminishing Waters: The Great Salt Lake's Desiccation and Its Mental Health Consequences
Neelam, Maheshwari
Bhui, Kamaldeep
Cowan, Trent
Freitag, Brian
Computers and Society
Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
Physics and Society
This study examines how the desiccation of Utah Great Salt Lake GSL, exacerbated by anthropogenic changes, poses significant health risks, particularly communities mental health. Reduced water inflow has exposed the lakebed, increasing airborne particulate matter PM2.5 and dust storms, which impact air quality. By integrating diverse datasets spanning from 1980 to present including insitu measurements, satellite imagery, and reanalysis products this study synthesizes hydrological, atmospheric, and epidemiological variables to comprehensively track the extent of the GSL surface water, local air quality fluctuations, and their effects on community mental health. The findings indicate a clear relationship between higher pollution days and more severe depressive symptoms. Specifically, individuals exposed to 22 days with PM2.5 levels above the World Health Organizations 24 hour guideline of 15 ug per m3 were more likely to experience severe depressive symptoms. Our results also suggest that people experiencing more severe depression not only face a higher number of high pollution days but also encounter such days more frequently. The study highlights the interconnectedness of poor air quality, environmental degradation and mental health emphasizing the need for more sustainable economic growth in the region.
title Diminishing Waters: The Great Salt Lake's Desiccation and Its Mental Health Consequences
topic Computers and Society
Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics
Physics and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.05745