Poll: Europeans face major mental health problems

by time news

She added that the risk increases significantly in young people.

The surveys conducted online, from March 2020 to May 2022, also showed that a greater number of people at the level of the 27 member states of the European Union, which are 27, face difficulties in managing their daily expenses and face a greater risk of suffering from a lack of energy resources, especially due to the high rate of inflation. .

She said "Eurofund" In a separate report, 53 percent of participants reported that they faced difficulties in managing their daily expenses in the spring of 2022, compared to 47 percent at the beginning of the pandemic.

added "Rising anxiety about financial conditions, along with the uncertainty of the future, may continue to negatively affect mental health".

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And surveys conducted by the “Eurofund” organization of the European Union, with the participation of 200,000 people, concluded that the number of people who reported that they suffer from “bad” or “very bad” psychological problems doubled from 6.4 percent in March 2020 at the beginning of the crisis to 12.7 percent after the passage of time. Two years, despite the reduction of restrictions on movement in European countries.

“With the reopening of societies, many were optimistic that mental health would improve, but in the spring of 2022, the risk of depression remained alarmingly high for many people,” the foundation said.

She added that the risk increases significantly in young people.

The surveys conducted online, from March 2020 to May 2022, also showed that a greater number of people at the level of the 27 member states of the European Union, which are 27, face difficulties in managing their daily expenses and face a greater risk of suffering from a lack of energy resources, especially due to the high rate of inflation. .

In a separate report, “Eurofund” said that 53 percent of participants reported that they faced difficulties in managing their daily expenses in the spring of 2022, compared to 47 percent at the beginning of the pandemic.

“The rising concern about financial conditions, along with the uncertainty of the future, may continue to negatively affect mental health,” she added.

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