In 2020, it was estimated that ** percent of people in the United States with major depression in majority white communities received some kind of telehealth counseling. This statistic shows the percentage of people in the United States with major depression who received counseling or therapy, by race/ethnicity of communities and by type of treatment.
The Office for Health Improvement and Disparities collects data on patients receiving treatment for alcohol and drug misuse. This includes details of their treatment and the outcomes.
The report and tables present statistical analysis of treatment data from 1 April 2020 to 31 March 2021. Treatment services from across England submitted the data.
Healthcare professionals can use these resources to understand:
For previous annual statistical reports and details of the methodology visit the https://www.ndtms.net/" class="govuk-link">NDTMS website.
These statistics were produced in partnership with the http://research.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/NDEC/" class="govuk-link">National Drug Evidence Centre.
In 2023, around 59.2 million adults in the United States received treatment or counseling for their mental health within the past year. Such treatment included inpatient or outpatient treatment or counseling, or the use of prescription medication. Anxiety and depression are two common reasons for seeking mental health treatment. Who most often receives mental health treatment? In the United States, women are almost twice as likely than men to have received mental health treatment in the past year, with around 21 percent of adult women receiving some form of mental health treatment in the past year, as of 2021. Considering age, those between 18 and 44 years are more likely to receive counseling or therapy than older adults, however older adults are more likely to take medication to treat their mental health issues. Furthermore, mental health treatment in general is far more common among white adults in the U.S. than among other races or ethnicities. In 2020, around 24.4 percent of white adults received some form of mental health treatment in the past year compared to 15.3 percent of black adults and 12.6 percent of Hispanics. Reasons for not receiving mental health treatment Although stigma surrounding mental health treatment has declined over the last few decades and access to such services has greatly improved, many people in the United States who want or need treatment for mental health issues still do not get it. For example, it is estimated that almost half of women with some form of mental illness did not receive any treatment in the past year, as of 2022. Sadly, the most common reason for U.S. adults to not receive mental health treatment is that they thought they could handle the problem without treatment. Other common reasons for not receiving mental health treatment include not knowing where to go for services or could not afford the costs.
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This statistical release is the annual report on the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme from 1st April 2020 to 31st March 2021. IAPT is run by the NHS in England and offers NICE-approved therapies for treating people with anxiety or depression. The publication contains analyses on activity, waiting times and outcomes such as recovery in 2020-21. In addition, the report covers a range of demographic analyses including outcomes for patients of different ages, ethnic group and separately for ex-British Armed Forces personnel. This is the first annual publication of psychological therapies data since the transition into IAPT dataset version 2.0. This was a significant change to the structure of the underlying data. For further details about how this has impacted these analyses, see the Data Quality Statement page of this report, and also the Methodological Change Note available from https://digital.nhs.uk/iaptreports. NOTE: On 17 November 2022, the main csv, therapy role csv and therapy type csv were mainly updated to include some missing breakdowns and apply some further suppression where needed. Due to the move from v1.5 to v2.0 of the dataset part way through the year, the amended main csv file now also includes some v2.0 data that was previously missing for one measure (CountTherapyEndTreatment_EmploymentSupport). These changes do not affect any of the national estimates previously published.
Healthcare professionals can use these statistics to understand:
The report and accompanying tables contain treatment data from 1 April 2020 to 31 March 2021.
Young people’s treatment centres from across England submitted the data to the NDTMS. These services are part of a wider network of prevention services that support young people with a range of issues and help them to build resilience.
For more information about the methodology for this report, see the https://www.ndtms.net/Publications/Annual" class="govuk-link">annual publications page of the NDTMS website.
These statistics were produced in partnership with the http://research.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/NDEC" class="govuk-link">National Drug Evidence Centre.
In 2020, around 55.7 percent of adults aged 18 years and older in the Netherlands reported they received counseling or treatment for their mental health in the past year, while in France around 32 percent of adults reported the same. This statistic illustrates the percentage of adults in select countries worldwide who received mental health counseling or treatment in the past year as of 2020.
This report presents national- and state-level data from the Treatment Episode Data Set (TEDS) for admissions and discharges occurring in 2020, and trend data from 2010 to 2021. It summarizes demographic information and the characteristics and outcomes of treatment for alcohol and/or drug use among clients aged 12 years and older in facilities that report to individual state administrative data systems. Data include records for treatment admissions and discharges that were received and processed through November 22, 2021.
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Cancer Gene Therapy Market size was valued at $16.50 billion in 2019 and is predicted to reach $558.24 billion by 2030
Public Health England collects data on patients receiving substance misuse treatment, details of their treatment and the outcomes.
The report and tables present statistical analysis of treatment data from 1 April 2019 to 31 March 2020. Treatment centres from across England submitted the data.
Healthcare professionals can use these resources to understand:
For previous annual statistical reports and details of the methodology visit the https://www.ndtms.net/Publications/Annual" class="govuk-link">NDTMS website.
These statistics were produced in partnership with the http://research.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/epidemiology/NDEC/" class="govuk-link">National Drug Evidence Centre.
This report presents results from the Mental Health Client-Level Data (MH-CLD) and Mental Health Treatment Episode Data Set (MH-TEDS) for individuals receiving mental health services from state mental health systems in 2020, as well as selected trends in data collected from such individuals between 2015 and 2020. The report provides information on mental health diagnoses, mental health treatment settings, and demographic and substance use characteristics of individuals in mental health treatment in facilities that reported to individual state administrative data systems.
This report presents results from the 2020 National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (N-SSATS), an annual census of facilities providing substance abuse treatment. Conducted by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), N-SSATS is designed to collect data on the location, characteristics, and use of alcohol and drug abuse treatment facilities and services throughout the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and other jurisdictions. It is important to note that values in charts, narrative lists, and percentage distributions are calculated using actual raw numbers and rounded for presentation in this report; calculations using rounded values may produce different results.
This statistic displays the percentage of U.S. mental health treatment facilities accepting Medicare in 2020, by region. The Midwest region, with ** percent, had the highest share of mental health facilities that accepted Medicare.
This publication is the official source of statistics on uses of the Mental Health Act in England. It is published annually and contains data on the number of uses of the Act, including detentions and use of Community Treatment Orders.
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This publication contains the official statistics about uses of the Mental Health Act(1) ('the Act') in England during 2020-21. Under the Act, people with a mental disorder may be formally detained in hospital (or 'sectioned') in the interests of their own health or safety, or for the protection of other people. They can also be treated in the community but subject to recall to hospital for assessment and/or treatment under a Community Treatment Order (CTO). In 2016-17, the way we source and produce these statistics changed. Previously these statistics were produced from the KP90 aggregate data collection. They are now primarily produced from the Mental Health Services Data Set (MHSDS). The MHSDS provides a much richer data source for these statistics, allowing for new insights into uses of the Act. However, some providers that make use of the Act are not yet submitting data to the MHSDS, or submitting incomplete data. Improvements in data quality have been made over the past year. NHS Digital is working with partners to ensure that all providers are submitting complete data and this publication includes guidance on interpreting these statistics. Please note: This publication covers the 2020-21 reporting year and, as such, it is likely the impact of COVID-19 may be evident as the national lockdown began on 23 March 2020. The time series data for people subject to detention does show a decrease in people subject to detention in March 2021 so the context of COVID-19 should be kept in mind when using and interpreting these statistics. Footnotes (1) The Mental Health Act 1983 as amended by the Mental Health Act 2007 and other legislation.
These state profiles include data from facilities that reported to N-SSATS for the survey reference date March 31, 2020. The N-SSATS collects data on the location, characteristics, services offered, and number of clients (collected every other year) in treatment at alcohol and drug abuse treatment facilities (public and private) throughout the 50 states, the District of Columbia, U.S. territories, and other jurisdictions.
According to the data, in Italy, there was an increase in the prescription of psychotropic drugs among children from 2019 to 2020. For example, prescriptions of antipsychotics increased of **** percent. This statistic shows the percentage change in the prescription of psychotropic drugs among minors in Italy from 2019 to 2020, by therapeutic area.
This statistic describes a projection of the total public spending on mental health treatments in the United States from 2009 to 2020. In 2009, public spending accounted for some **** billion U.S. dollars for the treatment of mental health.
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This statistical release makes available the most recent Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) monthly data, including activity, waiting times, and outcomes such as recovery. IAPT is run by the NHS in England and offers NICE-approved therapies for treating people with depression or anxiety. This release also includes experimental statistics from the IAPT integrated health pilot and the IAPT Employment Adviser pilot. We hope this information is helpful and would be grateful if you could spare a couple of minutes to complete a short customer satisfaction survey. Please use the survey in the related links to provide us with any feedback or suggestions for improving the report. COVID-19 and the production of statistics Due to the coronavirus illness (COVID-19) disruption, it would seem that this is now starting to affect the quality and coverage of some of our statistics, such as an increase in non-submissions for some datasets including IAPT. We are also starting to see some different patterns in the submitted data. For IAPT, there is a significant change in the rates for recovery and improvement compared to the last 12 months. Therefore, data should be interpreted with care over the COVID-19 period. For the duration of the COVID-19 period, we are now doing some early reporting to help with monitoring of any impact using provisional IAPT data. As part of the IAPT Version 2.0 changes, we are reviewing our publication outputs and looking to redesign our Power BI Dashboards. If you would like to provide input into the redesign and provide any feedback before the new dashboards go live, please contact us via email: mh.analysis@nhs.net
Explore the progression of average salaries for graduates in Clinical Mental Health Counseling Music Therapy from 2020 to 2023 through this detailed chart. It compares these figures against the national average for all graduates, offering a comprehensive look at the earning potential of Clinical Mental Health Counseling Music Therapy relative to other fields. This data is essential for students assessing the return on investment of their education in Clinical Mental Health Counseling Music Therapy, providing a clear picture of financial prospects post-graduation.
TheNational Directory of Mental Health Treatment Facilities - 2021is a listing of federal, state, and local government facilities and private facilities that provide mental health treatment services. It includes treatment facilities that responded to the 2020 National Mental Health Services Survey (N-MHSS). The information about each facility that appears in this Directory was provided by that facility in response to the 2020 N-MHSS. The N-MHSS is conducted annually by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).The Directory is ordered alphabetically by state, by city within each state, and by facility name within each city. Each facility listing includes codes that represent the services offered and other features of the facility, including codes that indicate services for hearing impaired and non-English-speaking clients. Codes are defined in a key shown on pages v-ix. Because the services offered by a particular facility may change over time, it is always a good idea to verify the information in this Directory when contacting a facility.
In 2020, it was estimated that ** percent of people in the United States with major depression in majority white communities received some kind of telehealth counseling. This statistic shows the percentage of people in the United States with major depression who received counseling or therapy, by race/ethnicity of communities and by type of treatment.