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A major analysis of Global Burden of Disease Study 2023 data, published in The Lancet on May 22-23, 2026, estimates nearly 1.2 billion people worldwide were living with a mental disorder in 2023—about a 95% increase since 1990.
Anxiety disorders and major depressive disorder are the most common contributors to the rise, and mental disorders have become the leading cause of disability globally, accounting for a large share of years lived with disability (YLDs). The burden peaks among adolescents aged 15–19 and disproportionately affects females (about 620 million women versus 552 million men). Researchers link the surge to a complex mix of factors including childhood sexual and intimate partner violence, bullying, poverty, inequality, climate shocks, pandemics and conflict.
The report also warns that health services have not expanded proportionately: only a small fraction of those with major depression receive minimally adequate treatment, leaving major gaps in prevention, early intervention and care worldwide.
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Key takeaways: the surge in recorded mental disorders reflects both improved detection and real increases tied to social stressors, but age-adjusted rates rose far less than raw counts. Meanwhile severe shortages and access barriers mean most affected people still lack effective care.


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