The mental health of young people has been significantly impacted by the COVID‑19 crisis. Prevalence of symptoms of anxiety and depression has risen dramatically among young people and remains higher than pre‑crisis levels even with the partial re‑opening of the economy, and compared to other age groups, even as economies partially re-open. The worsening of mental health can be attributed to disruptions to access to mental health services, the wide‑ranging impacts of school closures, and a labour market crisis that is disproportionately affecting young people. With adequate support and timely intervention, young people experiencing mental distress may be able to bounce back as we recover from the COVID‑19 crisis. This will require a scaling up of existing mental health support in education systems, workplaces and health systems, and comprehensive policies to support young people to remain in education, or to find and keep a job.
Supporting young people’s mental health through the COVID‑19 crisis
Policy paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
Policy paper11 October 202241 Pages
-
4 October 202212 Pages
-
Policy paper30 August 202227 Pages
-
21 April 202225 Pages
-
4 April 202224 Pages
-
Policy paper17 March 202257 Pages
-
Policy paper17 March 202216 Pages
Related publications
-
22 May 202652 Pages
-
Working paper
A large‑scale multi‑country stated preference approach
20 May 202669 Pages -
20 April 202613 Pages