11.5% of youth (or over 2.7 million youth) are experiencing severe major depression.

Rates of a severe major depressive episode were highest among youth who identified as more than one race, at 16.5% (about 123,000 youth).

The percentage of youth with severe major depressive episode in South Dakota (ranked 51) is nearly four times the percentage of youth with severe MDE in South Carolina (ranked 1).

The state prevalence of youth with Severe MDE ranges from 5.2% in South Carolina to 19.9% in South Dakota.

RankSort-descending State Percentage Number
 01 South Carolina 5.20% 19,000
02 New Jersey 7.50% 48,000
03 Mississippi 8.10% 19,000
04 Wisconsin 8.50% 37,000
05 Massachusetts 8.80% 40,000
06 California 9.20% 269,000
07 Pennsylvania 9.20% 79,000
08 Kentucky 9.30% 30,000
09 Rhode Island 9.90% 7,000
10 Georgia 10.00% 85,000
11 Delaware 10.10% 7,000
12 Connecticut 10.20% 26,000
13 Oklahoma 10.30% 32,000
14 Arkansas 10.60% 25,000
15 District of Columbia 10.60% 3,000
16 North Carolina 10.60% 82,000
17 Tennessee 10.60% 54,000
18 Wyoming 10.70% 5,000
19 New York 10.80% 137,000
20 Texas 10.80% 261,000
21 Colorado 10.90% 46,000
22 Hawaii 10.90% 10,000
23 Indiana 11.20% 57,000
24 Michigan 11.30% 83,000
25 Florida 12.30% 174,000
26 Maryland 12.40% 55,000
27 New Mexico 12.80% 21,000
28 Kansas 13.00% 30,000
29 West Virginia 13.00% 16,000
30 Arizona 13.10% 72,000
31 Alabama 13.20% 48,000
32 New Hampshire 13.30% 12,000
33 Montana 13.40% 10,000
34 North Dakota 13.60% 7,000
35 Missouri 13.80% 64,000
36 Nevada 13.80% 32,000
37 Ohio 13.90% 119,000
38 Vermont 13.90% 5,000
39 Washington 14.00% 74,000
40 Illinois 14.40% 136,000
41 Alaska 14.80% 8,000
42 Iowa 15.00% 36,000
43 Minnesota 15.20% 64,000
44 Nebraska 15.70% 23,000
45 Virginia 15.70% 97,000
46 Maine 16.30% 14,000
47 Utah 16.40% 50,000
48 Louisiana 16.60% 59,000
49 Idaho 17.50% 27,000
50 Oregon 19.00% 55,000
51 South Dakota 19.90% 14,000
52 National 11.50% 2,782,000



Youth with Severe Major Depressive Episode 2023 11.5% of youth (or over 2.7 million youth) are experiencing severe major depression. Rates of a severe major depressive episode were highest among youth who identified as more than one race, at 16.5% (about 123,000 youth).

30% of female student athletes and 25% of male student athletes report having anxiety, which is significantly higher than the 1 in 5 adults who experience a mental health condition during their life. Women's sports athletes reported higher mental health concerns than men's sports athletes.

 

What is CIT In Detroit?

The Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) program is a community partnership of law enforcement, mental health and addiction professionals, individuals who live with mental illness and/or addiction disorders, their families, and other advocates. It is an innovative first-responder model of police-based crisis intervention training to help persons with mental disorders and/or addictions access medical treatment rather than place them in the criminal justice system due to illness-related behaviors. It also promotes officer safety and the safety of the individual in crisis.

CIT PROGRAM GOALS:
Improve Officer and Consumer Safety

To help persons with mental disorders and/or addictions access medical treatment rather than place them in the criminal justice system due to illness related behaviors.

CORE COMPONENTS:

Community Collaboration: Vitally important to successful CIT programs is building relationships and breaking down silos between organizations and stakeholders. This broad-based, grassroots community collaboration is what makes CIT programs sustainable over time.

Accessible Crisis System: An outcome of productive community collaboration is the transformation of a crisis response system that is vibrant, responsive and easily accessible. Communities should work to provide a 24/7 crisis response, a “no wrong door” philosophy, and a 15 minute or under turnaround time to get first responders back on the streets.

Training for Law Enforcement/First Responders: The 40-hour training curriculum is designed to be taught by local specialists from the law enforcement, behavioral health and consumer/advocate field. Upon completion of the course, officers/first responders are better equipped to:

Understand common signs and symptoms of mental illnesses and co-occurring disorders;

Recognize when those signs and symptoms represent a crisis situation;

Safely de-escalate individuals experiencing behavioral health crises;

Utilize community resources and diversion strategies to provide assistance.

Behavioral Health Staff Training: It is imperative that behavioral health staff develop an understanding of the role of law enforcement/first responders, and why they are trained to respond in ways that they do. The goal is a deeper understanding and appreciation of one another’s roles, leading to improved collaboration.

Family/Consumer/Advocate Participation: People with lived experience provide invaluable insight in the 40 hour training, and consumers and family members are key resources in advocating for CIT programs and improved crisis services.

BENEFITS OF CIT:
Not only can CIT programs bring community leaders together, they can also help keep people with mental illness out of jail and in treatment, on the road to recovery. That’s because diversion programs like CIT reduce arrests of people with mental illness while simultaneously increasing the likelihood that individuals will receive mental health services. CIT programs also:

Give police officers more tools to do their job safely and effectively. Research shows that CIT is associated with improved officer attitude and knowledge about mental illness. In Memphis, for example, CIT resulted in an 80% reduction of officer injuries during mental health crisis calls.

Keep law enforcement’s focus on crime. Some communities have found that CIT has reduced the time officers spend responding to a mental health call. This puts officers back into the community more quickly.

Produce cost savings. It’s difficult to estimate exactly how much diversion programs can save communities. But incarceration is costly compared to community-based treatment. For example in Detroit an inmate with mental illness in jail costs $31,000 a year, while community-based mental health treatment costs only $10,000 a year.

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