|
|
| | |
|
Facts for Policymakers: Treatable Causes of Disability
Depression in Children and Adolescents
- About 2 percent of school-age children (i.e. children 6-12 years of age) appear to have a major depression at any one time. With puberty, the rate of depression increases to about 4 percent of this population experiencing major depression overall.
|
- Overall, approximately 20 percent of youth will have one or more episodes of major depression by the time they become adults.
|
Depression Affects Children on Many Levels
When children are in a depressive episode they do less well at school, have impaired relationships with their friends and family, suffer emotionally, and have an increased risk for attempted and completed
|
- Episodes of depression in children appear to last six to nine months on average but in some children they last for years at a time.
|
|
Consequences of Untreated
Mental Illnesses in Children
- Suicide – 3rd leading cause of death in youth.
- Imprisonment – 80 percent of youth entering the juvenile justice system have a diagnosable mental illness.
- Foster care - It is estimated that 85 percent of children in foster care have an emotional disorder or substance abuse disorder.
- School failure and drop-out at dramatically high rates.
- Custody relinquishment - Families are often forced to give up custody of their child to the state to secure services.
- Substance use as self-medication.
- Social isolation from their peers.
|
|
Next page: Depressions that Span a Lifetime
Policymakers Toolkit Home
|
|
| | |
|
Join NAMI today!
When you become a member of NAMI, you become part of America's largest grassroots organization dedicated to improving the lives of persons living with serious mental illness. And now you can
join online.