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Facts about Mental Health
Mental health problems are more common
than you may think.
*Around 1 in 6 people have a treatable mental illness,
*1 in 4 GP consultations include elements of mental health
*1 in 10
children aged 5 to 15 will need professional help for their mental health.
*Over 4,000
people take their own lives each year.
*Around 16% of working age adults have a mental health problem
*The
North West has the highest level of
hospital admissions for depression,
anxiety and schizophrenia.
*The
North West has
the
2
nd highest rate of people on incapacity benefit
for mental or behavioural
disorders
2
nd highest suicide rate for men and women under 75
3
rd highest rate of drug misuse
Only 20% of
people in the
North West with mental health problems are
employed.
More Facts
-
Around a quarter of all the drugs prescribed by the NHS are for mental
health problems
-
85% of the general public think that people with mental ill health have
been the subject of discrimination for too long. 90% agree that
we need to adopt a far more tolerant attitude towards people
with mental ill health
-
Stress-related absences account for half of all sicknesses from work.
-
Evidence suggests that 1 in 4 people with 'mental illness' have not
consulted a professional about their mental health.
- Official
figures suggest that 20% of women and 14% of men in England have
some form of 'mental illness.
-
By 2020,
depression will be second only to chronic heart disease as an
international health burden (in terms of cause of death,
disability, incapacity to work and the toll on medical
resources).
- Only 1 in 4 people experiencing mental ill-health receive
treatment
- A third of GPs’ time is spent dealing with mental health
issues.
- Mental ill-health costs the UK economy £100 billion a year,
yet only £1 in every £15 spent on health research is devoted to
mental health.
- The rate of common mental
health problems, typically depression and anxiety, has risen by
a fifth among middle aged women since 1993
- There has been an 80 per cent
increase in self-harm among women aged between 16 and 24 since
2000
- Depression is more common in
older people than dementia