The Youth Mental Health Crisis? It's More Complicated Than You Think

The narrative of a widespread youth mental health crisis in the US and UK is misleading. While a crisis exists, it disproportionately affects middle-aged white men and young American Indian men, not teenage girls. Suicide data reveals a correlation between rates across demographics, with middle-aged white men and young American Indian men exhibiting significantly higher rates than teens. Recent declines in suicide rates across most groups contradict the social media scapegoat theory. CDC data strongly links adverse childhood events (abuse, neglect, parental mental illness, incarceration) to youth mental health issues, far more so than social media use. The focus should shift from blaming technology to addressing family dysfunction as the root cause of many youth mental health problems.