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Mental health facts and statistics
Learn how common mental health problems are. And statistics about risk factors and mental health treatments.
This page includes statistics about suicide and self-harm.
Specific diagnoses
In any given week in England [2]:
- Mixed anxiety and depression: 8 in 100 people
- Generalised anxiety disorder (GAD): 6 in 100 people
- Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): 4 in 100 people
- Depression: 3 in 100 people
- Phobias: 2 in 100 people
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD): 1 in 100 people
- Panic disorder: fewer than 1 in 100 people.
A person's diagnosis may change several times during their life. Some complex conditions are measured by how many people will be given this diagnosis over the course of their lifetime, or in any given year:
- Antisocial personality disorder (ASPD): 3 in 100 people (in their lifetime)
- Borderline personality disorder (BPD): 2 in 100 people (in their lifetime)
- Bipolar disorder: 2 in 100 people (in their lifetime)
- Psychotic disorders (including schizophrenia): fewer than 1 in 100 people (in any given year)
But estimates for these diagnoses can vary quite a lot. Also, personality disorder and schizophrenia are controversial diagnoses. These labels can be stigmatising. And many people feel that they shouldn't be used at all.
Suicidal thoughts and self-harm
Suicidal thoughts and self-harm aren’t mental health diagnoses. But they are related to mental health. Over the course of someone’s lifetime [2]:
- 1 in 5 people have suicidal thoughts
- 1 in 14 people self-harm
- 1 in 15 people attempt suicide.
Women are more likely to have suicidal thoughts and make suicide attempts than men [2]. But men are 3 times more likely to take their own life than women [4].
How many people get treatment?
Reports from both England [2] and Wales [3] suggest that:
- Approximately only 1 in 3 adults with a common mental health problem are currently getting treatment in the form of talking therapies, medication or both.
- The most common treatment offered is psychiatric medication [2].
Are mental health problems increasing?
The overall number of people reporting mental health problems has been going up in recent years.
- The amount of people with common mental health problems went up by 20% between 1993 to 2014, in both men and women [2].
- The percentage of people reporting severe mental health symptoms in any given week rose from 7% in 1993, to over 9% in 2014 [2].
- The number of young women reporting common mental health problems has been going up [2].
Overall reported suicide numbers have also gone up in England and Wales since 2018. They had been going down before that.
This is partly because in 2018 the rules changed around recording causes of death. So more deaths are now being recorded as suicide, whereas before they might have been recorded as something else.
But there has still been a clear increase in the number of men and the number of people under 25 taking their own life since 2018 [4].
We also know that:
- People reporting self-harm went up by 62% between the years 2000–2014 (that means it more than doubled) [2].
- People reporting having had suicidal thoughts within the past year went up by 30% between the years 2000–2014 [2].
- The number of people who self-harm or have suicidal thoughts is rising faster than the number of people experiencing mental health problems overall [2].
This might mean that people are finding it harder to cope with mental health problems.
Who is most affected by mental health problems?
Anyone can get a mental health problem. But we know that some groups are more likely to get them than others.
These include:
- People who identify as LGBTQIA+. LGBTQIA+ people are between 2–3 times more likely than heterosexual people to report having a mental health problem in England [5].
- Black or Black British people. 23% of Black or Black British people will experience a common mental health problem in any given week. This compares to 17% of White British people [2].
- Young women aged 16-24. Over a quarter (26%) of young women aged between 16–24 years old report having a common mental health problem in any given week. This compares to 17% of adults. And this number has been going up [2].
- Around 40% of people in England who have overlapping problems including homelessness, substance misuse and contact with the criminal justice system in any given year also have a mental health problem [6]. (This is sometimes called facing ‘multiple disadvantage’.)
It's important to know that your identity does not give you mental health problems. Causes of mental health problems can be very complicated. Higher risk for these groups is linked to several factors [7][8], including:
- facing social inequality and disadvantage
- facing discrimination and social exclusion
- going through traumatic experiences
- differences in physical health.
- McManus, S., Meltzer, H., Brugha, T. S., Bebbington, P. E., & Jenkins, R. (2009). Adult psychiatric morbidity in England, 2007: results of a household survey.
- McManus S, Bebbington P, Jenkins R, Brugha T. (eds.) (2016). Mental health and wellbeing in England: Adult psychiatric morbidity survey 2014.
- Welsh Health Survey 2015: Health status, illness, and other conditions.
- Samaritans (2019), Samaritans Suicide Statistics Report.
- Journal of General Internal Medicine (2015), Sexual Minorities in England Have Poorer Health and Worse Health Care Experiences: A National Survey.
- Lankelly Chase Foundation (2015) Hard Edges: Mapping severe and multiple disadvantage.
- Public Health England (2017), Better mental health: JSNA toolkit: 2. Mental health: Environmental factors
- Marmot, M., et al (2010), Fair society, healthy lives: Strategic review of health inequalities in England post 2010.
This information was published in June 2020.
This page is currently under review. All content was accurate when published.
References and bibliography available on request.
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