Why mental health is not just a private matter but a public one — how stigma shapes it, why access to care is unequal, and how communities and societies can do better.
Young children feel many things — joy, sadness, worry, anger, excitement, fear. They do not always have words for what they feel. Sometimes they do not understand why. At this age, the goal is not to teach children about mental illness. The goal is to build two simple, protective habits. First, all feelings are normal. Feeling sad, worried, or angry is not bad. It is part of being human. What matters is what we do with these feelings. Second, it is okay to ask for help. When a child feels very sad, very scared, or very angry, they can tell someone — a parent, a teacher, an older sister or brother, a friend. They do not have to carry it alone. These small habits, built early, protect children throughout life. Many adults struggle to say when they feel bad because they were told as children that it was weakness. Building the opposite — that asking for help is wise, not weak — is one of the most valuable things early teaching can do. Be gentle and age-appropriate. Do not push children to share anything they do not want to share. Do not ask individual children about problems. Focus on general feelings and kindness. In classrooms with children facing real distress, bring the topic with care. No materials are needed.
Strong people never feel sad, scared, or worried.
Everyone feels sad, scared, and worried sometimes — including the strongest, bravest, and most successful people in the world. Feelings are not a sign of weakness. They are part of being human. Real strength is not never feeling bad. It is knowing what to do with those feelings — talking to someone, taking care of yourself, and remembering that bad feelings pass. Pretending not to feel is not strength. It often makes things harder.
Children should not bother grown-ups with feelings — grown-ups have bigger problems.
The adults who love you want to know when you feel bad. You are not bothering them. Your feelings matter to them. In fact, knowing that you can come to them — and being able to help you — is often one of the most important parts of their day. Children who learn to talk to trusted adults about feelings grow up stronger and happier, not weaker. Asking for help is one of the wisest things anyone can do, at any age.
Mental health is the state of our mind and feelings, just as physical health is the state of our body.
It can be good, difficult, or somewhere in between, and it changes across our lives. Good mental health does not mean feeling happy all the time. It means being able to cope with normal ups and downs, to have meaningful relationships, to deal with stress, and to work, play, and rest in reasonable balance. Difficult mental health includes stress, anxiety, low mood, sadness, and worry that affect daily life. Serious mental health conditions — depression, anxiety disorders, and others — affect many more people than commonly recognised. The World Health Organization estimates that around one in eight people globally live with a mental health condition at any given time. Depression and anxiety together affect hundreds of millions. Most people who experience mental health problems do not get the help they need — especially in lower-income countries, where specialist services are scarce. Stigma is one of the main reasons mental health is so often hidden. In many cultures, admitting to mental health problems has been seen as weakness, failure, or family shame. People with mental illness have sometimes been blamed, feared, or excluded. This is slowly changing in many places, but it is still a powerful obstacle to treatment and support. Community and relationships protect mental health enormously. Research shows that strong social ties, supportive families, meaningful work or study, time in nature, and regular physical activity all help. Loneliness, isolation, and unstable conditions all harm mental health. This is true across cultures. The communities around us — families, friends, schools, workplaces, neighbourhoods — shape whether mental health flourishes or struggles. Young people today face particular mental health pressures. Rates of anxiety and depression among young people have risen in many countries, especially since the 2010s.
Social media is often blamed, and the evidence suggests it plays a significant role, particularly for girls and for heavy users. Other factors include academic pressure, economic worries, climate change anxiety, family stress, and the long shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic. Young people today are also much more willing to talk about mental health than previous generations, which is a major step forward. Mental health is a public issue — not only a private one — for several reasons. First, mental health problems affect education, work, relationships, and communities, not just individuals. Second, treatment access is deeply unequal, which is a justice issue. Third, laws, workplaces, schools, and public attitudes shape whether people can seek help without penalty. Fourth, the conditions that affect mental health — poverty, housing, safety, loneliness, climate anxiety, discrimination — are public matters. Private solutions alone will not fix them.
This is a sensitive topic. Some students will be dealing with mental health problems themselves, or living with family members who are. Do not ask individual students about their own experiences. Focus on general understanding and kindness. Do not describe self-harm, suicide, or eating disorder behaviours in detail — this can be harmful. If a child shows signs of serious distress, talk to them privately with care and involve appropriate support. Normalise asking for help without sensationalising it.
Mental health problems are a sign of weak character.
This is one of the oldest and most damaging misunderstandings. Mental health problems happen to strong people, hardworking people, kind people, successful people, religious people, and every other kind of person. Soldiers, athletes, doctors, and leaders have all had them. Having a mental health condition says as much about a person's character as having a broken leg. It is something that happens, often for reasons outside the person's control — genes, life events, stress, loss, illness. What matters is how they respond, and whether they get the help they need. Character is shown in how someone faces a challenge, not in whether they ever have one.
If you just think positively, you can solve any mental health problem.
Positive thinking can be helpful, but it is not a cure for serious mental health conditions. Depression, anxiety disorders, and similar conditions are not simply bad moods that can be switched off. They involve real changes in the brain, often triggered by difficult experiences, stress, illness, or other causes. Telling someone with depression to 'just cheer up' is like telling someone with a broken leg to 'just walk'. It does not help, and it often makes the person feel worse because they think they have failed at something simple. Real help — counselling, medicine in some cases, support from others — works. Positive thinking is not wrong, but it is not enough on its own.
If someone is talking about suicide or self-harm, they are just looking for attention — it is safer to ignore it.
This is a dangerous myth. When someone talks about suicide or self-harm, it is almost always a serious signal. Studies show that most people who die by suicide told someone beforehand, directly or indirectly. Taking it seriously — by listening, not judging, and telling a trusted adult — can save a life. 'Attention-seeking' is often a dismissive way of saying 'asking for help'. The right response to a person asking for help is to help, not to turn away. If a classmate or friend says something that worries you, tell a teacher, a parent, or another trusted adult. The friend may be angry with you at first. They will almost always be grateful later.
Mental health is one of the most important — and most neglected — public issues of our time. Teaching it well requires attention to scale, causes, inequalities, and what can be done.
Mental health refers to a person's psychological and emotional state — how they think, feel, relate to others, and handle stress. Mental illness describes specific conditions that affect mental health in significant ways. These include depression, anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, eating disorders, and many others. The World Health Organization estimates that around one in eight people — close to a billion — live with a mental health condition at any given time. Depression alone affects about 280 million people. Anxiety disorders affect similar numbers. Suicide remains one of the leading causes of death among young people, killing over 700,000 people worldwide each year — more than malaria or HIV. Most mental illness is undiagnosed and untreated. WHO estimates that over two-thirds of people with mental health conditions globally receive no treatment. The gap is largest in low-income countries, where specialist services are scarce, but even wealthy countries fall short.
Mental health is shaped by far more than individual factors. Key social determinants include poverty, inequality, unemployment, housing instability, childhood adversity, discrimination, violence, loneliness, and climate-related stress. Depression is roughly twice as common among people in the poorest income groups as among the wealthiest. People exposed to childhood abuse or neglect have much higher rates of mental illness in adulthood. Marginalised groups — LGBTQ people, ethnic and religious minorities, people with disabilities — face particular mental health burdens linked to discrimination. This matters because it means mental health cannot be fully addressed through individual treatment alone. Reducing mental illness at population level requires addressing the conditions in which people live, work, and grow up.
Stigma — the social mark of shame — remains a major barrier to mental health care. Research across many countries shows that stigma delays help-seeking, reduces treatment adherence, and worsens outcomes. Self-stigma — internalising negative views of one's own condition — deepens distress. Discrimination based on mental illness persists in employment, housing, relationships, and law. Some countries still detain people with serious mental illness in conditions that would be unacceptable for physical illness. Anti-stigma campaigns (Time to Change in the UK, various international efforts) have shown measurable effects, though progress is slow. Speaking openly about mental health — by public figures, celebrities, and ordinary people — has become a significant force for change. Young people are generally more willing to discuss mental health than older generations, which is one of the most encouraging trends of recent decades.
The treatment gap is one of the starkest inequalities in global health. In low-income countries, less than 1 psychiatrist per 100,000 people is common; in high-income countries, 10-20 per 100,000 is typical. Even in wealthy countries, wait times for specialist care can be months; primary care often lacks capacity; children's services are especially strained. The WHO Mental Health Atlas documents the gap. Many countries spend under 2% of health budgets on mental health, despite mental conditions accounting for roughly 13% of global disease burden. The gap is not just about specialists. Community-based care, peer support, digital therapy, and task-sharing with non-specialist health workers are expanding the options in resource-poor settings. Countries like Zimbabwe (the Friendship Bench programme), India, and Ethiopia have developed scalable approaches using trained lay workers.
Mental health conditions in young people have risen in many countries over the past decade. US, UK, Canadian, Nordic, and several Asian studies show significant rises in adolescent anxiety and depression since around 2010-2012. The trend is particularly strong among adolescent girls.
Social media use, especially intensive use of image-focused platforms, shows significant correlations with poor mental health outcomes, particularly among girls. Academic pressure, climate anxiety, economic insecurity, and pandemic disruption all likely contribute. The evidence on smartphones specifically is strong enough that several countries have restricted them in schools, and major researchers (Jean Twenge, Jonathan Haidt) argue the shift is causing real harm. Some researchers urge caution about specific causal claims, noting that increased reporting of mental health problems may partly reflect increased willingness to disclose. But the overall trend is widely accepted.
The evidence on social media and mental health has matured significantly since 2020. Heavy use correlates with depression and anxiety, especially in teenage girls. Specific harms include social comparison, disrupted sleep, cyberbullying, and exposure to harmful content (pro-eating-disorder communities, pro-self-harm material, explicit content reaching young children). Platform design choices — infinite scroll, notifications, algorithmic feeds, engagement incentives — amplify these effects. Internal research from Meta (leaked 2021) showed the company was aware of significant harms to teen mental health.
Several US states, the UK, the EU, and Australia have introduced or proposed age limits, design requirements, and duty-of-care obligations. These regulations are contested but reflect growing evidence that platforms cannot self-regulate effectively. Mental health as public and political issue. Several reasons make mental health a public issue. First, mental illness is a leading cause of disability globally, affecting economies and social stability. Second, treatment gaps are largely the product of policy choices — funding, workforce training, insurance coverage, school and workplace provisions. Third, the social determinants of mental health are public: poverty, housing, work, schools, community. Fourth, stigma is a social phenomenon that changes when communities change. Fifth, access to mental health care is increasingly seen as a human right — reinforced by international frameworks. Mental health advocacy has become a significant global movement, with organisations like Mental Health Europe, United for Global Mental Health, and many national bodies pressing for greater attention.
Evidence on what helps exists, though implementation lags.
Safe, stable childhoods, reducing poverty, school-based programmes, workplace wellbeing.
Accessible services that people can reach without stigma or delay.
Talking therapies (cognitive behavioural therapy, others), medication where appropriate, combined care.
Peer support, mutual aid, community mental health centres.
Well-designed apps and online therapy, with appropriate safeguards.
Public campaigns, personal stories, integration of mental health into wider health systems.
Combining mental and physical health in primary care.
School-based mental health support, reducing academic pressure, designing healthier online environments, restricting smartphone use in schools, training teachers to recognise distress.
This topic must be handled with care. Some students will be dealing with mental health problems themselves. Do not ask them about their personal experiences. Do not describe in detail self-harm methods, suicide methods, or eating disorder behaviours — 'safe messaging' guidelines exist for good reason. Do not romanticise or sensationalise distress. Focus on understanding, compassion, and practical knowledge. Signal repeatedly that help is available and that reaching out is a sign of strength. If a student shows signs of serious distress, talk to them privately and involve appropriate support. Anti-bullying and anti-stigma messaging should be woven throughout the topic, not added as an afterthought.
Mental health problems are mainly about chemistry in the brain, so the answer is medication.
This oversimplified view has been influential but is not supported by current evidence. Mental health conditions involve biology, but also life experiences, social conditions, relationships, and environment. The 'chemical imbalance' framing popularised in the 1990s to explain depression turned out to be more marketing than science; recent reviews have found the serotonin hypothesis lacks strong support. Medications help many people — but so do talking therapies, social support, addressing underlying life problems, and addressing social determinants like poverty or discrimination. Reducing mental health to brain chemistry obscures how much else matters. The most effective approaches combine biological, psychological, and social dimensions.
Anti-stigma campaigns have worked — society has largely moved past mental health stigma.
Stigma has decreased significantly in many places, especially for common conditions like depression and anxiety. But it remains powerful, and serious inequalities persist. Stigma around severe mental illness — psychosis, schizophrenia — has declined less than stigma around depression. Self-stigma — internalised shame — remains widespread. Employment discrimination against people with mental health histories is documented in many countries. Treatment-seeking rates still fall short of need, and stigma remains a significant factor. Anti-stigma campaigns have produced real but partial progress. Declaring the problem solved risks reducing pressure for the further change still needed.
Young people today are just more sensitive or less resilient than previous generations.
This framing blames young people for patterns with external causes. Research shows that rates of diagnosable mental health conditions have genuinely risen in many countries — hospitalisations for self-harm in adolescent girls roughly doubled in the US and UK over the 2010s, a change that cannot be explained by 'sensitivity' alone. The most plausible causes are specific changes in young people's environments: smartphone and social media saturation, economic insecurity, academic pressure, climate anxiety, pandemic disruption, and reduced in-person socialising. Previous generations had their own challenges; they did not have 24/7 algorithmic feeds in their pockets from age 12. Blaming young people misreads the problem and misses where change is actually needed — in the environments they have inherited.
Discussing suicide openly encourages more suicide — silence is safer.
This view was widespread historically but is now understood to be wrong. Research on suicide contagion shows that specific ways of discussing suicide matter — detailed descriptions of methods, romanticised portrayals, and sensationalised coverage can increase risk, particularly among vulnerable people. But careful, open discussion — following safe messaging guidelines — does not increase suicide rates and may reduce them by reducing isolation and encouraging help-seeking. The WHO, major psychiatric bodies, and suicide prevention organisations now support open discussion under appropriate safeguards. Silence can be dangerous. What matters is how the conversation is conducted, not whether it happens at all.
Key texts for students: Matthew Johnstone, 'I Had a Black Dog' (2005) — short illustrated introduction to depression. Matt Haig, 'Reasons to Stay Alive' (2015) — accessible memoir of depression. Johann Hari, 'Lost Connections' (2018) — on social determinants. Jonathan Haidt, 'The Anxious Generation' (2024) — on young people and smartphones. Andrew Solomon, 'The Noonday Demon' (2001) — deeper historical and personal exploration of depression. Bessel van der Kolk, 'The Body Keeps the Score' (2014) — on trauma. For academic and policy contexts: WHO World Mental Health Report (2022); Lancet Commission on Global Mental Health reports. For data: WHO Mental Health Atlas; Our World in Data mental health pages. Organisations: WHO Special Initiative for Mental Health; United for Global Mental Health; Mental Health Europe; national mental health bodies. For young people specifically: YoungMinds (UK); Jed Foundation (US); ReachOut (Australia); Samaritans (many countries for crisis support). For safe messaging: the WHO guide 'Preventing Suicide: A Resource for Media Professionals'. For teachers: MindEd (UK) offers free e-learning modules for educators on young people's mental health. Classroom resources should always be reviewed for safe messaging standards before use.
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