Since the pandemic, America has put a particular emphasis on addressing an ongoing mental health and loneliness crisis, particularly among teens. But another group's struggles with depression and anxiety are essentially going unnoticed.
'More vulnerable than ever' Young adulthood could be a "time of great growth and possibility." Still, many young adults say they feel "on edge, lonely, directionless, and that they worry about financial security," said Richard Weissbourd, the faculty director of Making Caring Common, a Harvard Graduate School of Education project.
His 2023 study found that 36% of people ages 18 to 25 reported experiencing anxiety, and 29% reported experiencing depression, about double the rates among 14-to-17-year-olds on both questions. "Many are 'achieving to achieve' and find little meaning in either school or work," said Weissbourd.
Young adults are "more vulnerable than ever," said The Atlantic. "But much of American society doesn't see them that way." Other surveys of young adults have "similarly alarming findings" as the Harvard study. When Weissbourd received the study's data, it was "really upsetting," he said to The Atlantic. "What is going on here? And why aren't we talking about it more?"
'Less attention and fewer resources' The mental health of young adults since the pandemic "hasn't been on our public radar in the way that teens' mental health has," said Milena Batanova, Making Caring Common's director of research and evaluation and a co-author of the report. Overall, the "20-somethings have received less attention and fewer resources," said The Washington Post.
There's a lot more that needs to be done to "support young adults' mental health and devote more resources to prevention," said Kiran Bhai, MCC's schools and parenting programs director, including "reducing the stressors that young people are facing and helping them develop the skills they need to thrive." Older adults "need to acknowledge this crisis," Faith Hill said at The Atlantic.
Despite the alarming findings about young adults, there's a silver lining, said MCC faculty director Weissbourd. "For decades, people have suffered silently and terribly who have experienced depression and anxiety, and this is the generation that's talking about it." |