Anne Tonna
University of Newcastle
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anne Tonna.
Australasian Psychiatry | 2007
Glenn Albrecht; Gina-Maree Sartore; Linda Connor; Nick Higginbotham; Sonia Freeman; Brian Kelly; Helen J. Stain; Anne Tonna; Georgia Pollard
Objective: Solastalgia is a new concept developed to give greater meaning and clarity to environmentally induced distress. As opposed to nostalgia – the melancholia or homesickness experienced by individuals when separated from a loved home – solastalgia is the distress that is produced by environmental change impacting on people while they are directly connected to their home environment. The paper will focus on two contexts where collaborative research teams have found solastalgia to be evident: the experiences of persistent drought in rural NSW and the impact of large-scale open-cut coal mining on individuals in the Upper Hunter Valley of NSW. In both cases, people exposed to environmental change experienced negative affect that is exacerbated by a sense of powerlessness or lack of control over the unfolding change process. Methods: Qualitative (interviews and focus groups) and quantitative (community-based surveys) research has been conducted on the lived experience of drought and mining, and the findings relevant to solastalgia are presented. Results: The authors are exploring the potential uses and applications of the concept of solastalgia for understanding the psychological impact of the increasing incidence of environmental change worldwide. Conclusions: Worldwide, there is an increase in ecosystem distress syndromes matched by a corresponding increase in human distress syndromes. The specific role played by global-scale environmental challenges to ‘sense of place’ and identity will be explored in the future development of the concept of solastalgia.
Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2011
Craig Richard Hart; Helen L. Berry; Anne Tonna
OBJECTIVE NSW has just experienced its worst drought in a century. As years passed with insufficient rain, drought-related mental health problems became evident on farms. Our objective is to describe how, in response, the Rural Adversity Mental Health Program was introduced in 2007 to raise awareness of drought-related mental health needs and help address these needs in rural and remote NSW. The program has since expanded to include other forms of rural adversity, including recent floods. SETTING Rural NSW. DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS, INTERVENTIONS: Designed around community development principles, health, local service networks and partner agencies collaborated to promote mental health, education and early intervention. Strategies included raising mental health literacy, organising community social events and disseminating drought-related information. Priority areas were Aboriginal communities, older farmers, young people, women, primary health care and substance use. RESULTS Over 3000 people received mental health literacy training in the four years of operation from 2007 to 2010. Stakeholders collaborated to conduct hundreds of mental health-related events attended by thousands of people. A free rural mental health support telephone line provided crisis help and referral to rural mental health-related services. CONCLUSION Drought affected mental health in rural NSW. A community development model was accepted and considered effective in helping communities build capacity and resilience in the face of chronic drought-related hardship. Given the scale, complexity and significance of drought impacts and rural adjustment, and the threats posed by climate change, a long-term approach to funding such programs would be appropriate.
Rural society | 2009
Anne Tonna; Brian Kelly; Judith Crockett; Julie Greig; Richard Buss; Russell Roberts; Murray Wright
Abstract In recent years there has been increasing recognition of the social impact of drought on rural communities. This paper provides an overview of a major mental health program developed in response to persistent severe drought and longer-term social and economic restructuring in New SouthWales agriculture. Led by government and incorporating close collaboration with rural community agencies and services, the program’s design and implementation was informed by existing evidence regarding mental health promotion, illness prevention, early intervention models, disaster management and a series of core project principles and goals based on community development practice. Improvements in mental health literacy and service collaboration and coordination suggest lessons learnt from the program will have applicability to future projects that aim to address mental health needs and promote the capacity of rural communities to adapt to the continuing impacts of future droughts and longer-term climate change.
Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2008
Gina Sartore; Brian Kelly; Helen J. Stain; Jeffrey Fuller; Lyn Fragar; Anne Tonna
Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2007
Jeffrey Fuller; Brian Kelly; Gina Sartore; Lynne Fragar; Anne Tonna; Georgia Pollard; Trevor Hazell
Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2008
Lyn Fragar; Bridget Kelly; Margot Peters; Antonia J. Z. Henderson; Anne Tonna
Australian Journal of Rural Health | 2005
Gina Sartore; Bryan Hoolahan; Anne Tonna; Brian Kelly; Helen J. Stain
Acta Neuropsychiatrica | 2006
Gina-Maree Sartore; Brian Kelly; Lyn Fragar; Jeffrey Fuller; Helen J. Stain; Anne Tonna; Georgia Pollard
Archive | 2008
Julie Greig; Judith Crockett; Anne Tonna
Archive | 2005
Gina Sartore; Helen J. Stain; Brian Kelly; Nick Higginbotham; Glenn Albrecht; Anne Tonna