“…In the limited number of studies of children with intellectual and mental disorders, elevated distress in caregivers, particularly mothers, was most predicted by the presence of autistic spectrum disorder, conduct disorder, oppositional defiance disorder, and other psychopathology 67 . With the elevated risk conferred by air pollution on both several of these maternal disorders and several of these childhood disorders, there is a mutually reinforcing deterioration of the ability of the mother and child to cope together driven by air pollution and other climate effects, often within the adverse socioenvironmental circumstances in which the poorest quality air environments are found 68 . Fortunately, family, multifamily, and group interventions that include psychoeducation, skills training, emotional regulation strategies, play, and mind–body exercises may improve outcomes 69 and are adaptable to the kinds of community‐level novel interventions to improve mental health that the scale of climate change may demand.…”