Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Youth hit hardest by rising mental health crisis

A fourth wave of the pandemic is coming, characteri­zed by angst, often burnout and mental illness. A new study suggests young people will be hit hardest by the rising economic costs of the pandemic.

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Experience appears to tell us that mental health has been hit by the pandemic, but few have estimated its economic costs. A report entitled "Coronaviru­s generation. Growing up in a pandemic," prepared by the Polish Economic Institute, does precisely that and has found that young people are taking the brunt of the economic hit.

The overall annual increase in costs due to COVID-19-related mental health problems among young people is estimated at 0.49% of GDP worldwide, i.e. $407 billion (€335 billion), it says.

That amount includes $185 billion in additional direct spending on health systems, $79.6 billion on improving social security programs, and $141.9 billion in indirect costs related to lower employment and decreased productivi­ty, the report states.

Mental health profession­als agree we could be witnessing a major crisis. This "echo pandemic" will see a dramatic rise in mental health problems following the COVID-19 pandemic, David Dozois, a professor at the University of Western Ontario, told DW.

Dozois said a poll by Mental Health Research Canada showed that the 18- 34 age group was struggling the most from COVID-19.

Age difference­s key

Those who reported the poorest mental health have been young adults and individual­s who experience­d financial adversity or were unable to receive care for other medical conditions. Not getting enough sleep, exercise, or face-to-face socializat­ion also increased the risk for poorer mental well-being, the report notes.

"People from all walks of life have been hit hard by COVID-19, although different age groups tend to differ in the types of stressors that they're experienci­ng," Steven Taylor, a professor and clinical psychologi­st at the University of British Columbia and author of "The Psychology of Pandemics," told DW.

In the UK, by the middle of 2020, almost one in five adults experience­d some form of depression, this almost double the figure of one in 10 before the pandemic, according to the most recent data released by the UK Office for National Statistics.

"For many years there has been a rise in the number of young people experienci­ng problems with their mental health, and it is concerning to find that this has been significan­tly exacerbate­d due to

COVID-19," Simon Evans, a lecturer in neuroscien­ce at the University of Surrey, told DW.

The causes

The report notes that mental health has been deteriorat­ed by reduced labor market opportunit­ies, worse prospects for stable employment, the consequenc­es of social isolation and stress resulting from potential effects of becoming infected with the coronaviru­s.

At the same time, it states, fewer marriages, more divorces, reduced fertility, increased social pathologie­s led by crime or alcohol abuse are also being witnessed.

During the pandemic, financial support for critical mental health services was frozen in 93% of countries worldwide, according to the WHO, while demand for mental health support kept increasing.

What needs to change?

Post-pandemic, several things needed to be done to avert a mental health crisis, Taylor said.

"It is critically important that government­s find ways to offset the socioecono­mic impacts experience­d by people. The effects of job loss are of particular concern, because in the past, during economic recessions, the rise in unemployme­nt has been linked to a rise in the rate of suicide, especially among working-age men," he explained.

"Ideally, there needs to be more widespread use of programs like those implemente­d in China during 2020, which involved TV programs and other media programs offering advice about mental health problems, web and internet apps for self-help, telephone hotlines, and teleconfer­encing facilities for linking people with mental health practition­ers," Taylor argued.

Krzysztof Kutwa, an analyst at the Polish Economic Institute, told DW: "It is necessary to further pursue a countercyc­lical policy in the form of fiscal stimulatio­n aimed at reducing youth unemployme­nt."

 ??  ?? Young people look set to suffer most from the rising costs of the coronaviru­s pandemic
Young people look set to suffer most from the rising costs of the coronaviru­s pandemic

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