The impact of extreme weather on young people

The Extreme Weather Survey will be used to inform future planning for extreme weather in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Sarah-Jane Paine
“Research has shown that extreme events such as severe flooding and cyclones can take a greater toll on young people’s wellbeing," says Associate Professor Sarah-Jane Paine. Photo: Elise Manahan

A new project looking at how the severe weather that hit many parts of the North Island earlier this year has impacted the wellbeing of young people starts on 1 August.

The Extreme Weather Survey is being led by Waipapa Taumata Rau's Growing Up in New Zealand, a longitudinal study that has been following the lives of more than 6,000 children since 2009.

Around 1,400 young people in the study, and a caregiver from the hardest hit regions during the 2023 Auckland Anniversary Weekend floods and Cyclone Gabrielle, are being invited to take part in the online survey.

Growing Up in New Zealand’s research director, Associate Professor Sarah-Jane Paine, says the research will be used to inform future planning for extreme weather in Aotearoa New Zealand and is an important opportunity for young people and their families to have their voices and experiences heard.

“Research has shown that extreme events such as severe flooding and cyclones can take a greater toll on young people’s wellbeing, so this work is focused on understanding how they managed through these events, and importantly how they are doing now."

She says the survey offers families in the Growing Up in New Zealand study the chance to let the Government and recovery agencies know how the flooding and cyclone that hit Aotearoa in January and February this year has affected them and what can be done to better prepare for these kinds of events in the future.

The initiative is part of the Government's urgent research and science response to assess the impacts of these weather events.

The Ministry for Business Innovation and Employment is funding several projects, including the Extreme Weather Survey, to collect evidence to inform both the recovery efforts and future planning.

Paine says the survey will build on information the study has collected from families on wellbeing in previous years.

“Understanding what shapes and impacts wellbeing in young people is an area of focus for us at Growing Up in New Zealand. This project will allow us to compare wellbeing measures from before and after the extreme weather to find out how it has impacted them and identify ways in which the recovery efforts can provide the best support.

The Extreme Weather Survey will be asking about physical and mental health, as well as relationships with family and friends and impacts on their school, neighborhood and wider community.

It will be open for the month of August, with findings expected to be published before the end of the year.

Media contact

Jodi Yeats | Media adviser
M: 027 202 6372
E: jodi.yeats@auckland.ac.nz