Mental health conditions
Like physical illnesses, mental health conditions are diagnosed by a specific set of symptoms, and most are treatable or manageable. If difficult thoughts, feelings or behaviors interfere with your quality of life, you may be dealing with a treatable condition. The sooner you reach out for support, the sooner you can feel better.
Learn
The prospect of having any condition or illness – mental or physical – can be overwhelming. There are also a lot of myths and misconceptions around mental health conditions that can be confusing. Here are some quick FAQs on these conditions.
What is a mental health condition?
Mental health conditions are defined by the severity and longevity of the negative feelings and behaviors. While symptoms differ, most conditions involve feelings that impact work, school, relationships and quality of life for weeks or months.
What causes mental health conditions?
There are many factors that influence mental health, including genetics, childhood development, cultural perceptions, access to self-care resources and professional support, and exposure to trauma.
Do these conditions impact work or school?
Most people with mental health conditions can maintain a full quality of life with the right support and treatment. Mental health conditions are covered under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), meaning people with these conditions are protected from discrimination under the law.
Will I have to take medicine?
It’s important to not try to self-diagnose or predict what a treatment plan might be. When emotional struggles impact our quality of life, a mental health professional can help us understand what’s going on. Treatment plans can include talk therapy, coping strategies and medication.
Mental health conditions
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Anxiety Disorders
Most of us experience anxiety at some point in our lives. Coping and self-care skills usually work to manage those feelings, but when anxiety continues at a level that interferes with your ability to get things done or maintain healthy relationships, you may be struggling with an anxiety disorder.
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Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar disorder involves episodes of mania where a person feels extremely “up” — full of energy, elated, sometimes euphoric — and depressive periods where they feel sad, apathetic and hopeless. If unaddressed, this condition can severely interfere with daily life and well-being but is treatable once diagnosed.
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Depression
Depression, also known as clinical depression or major depressive disorder, is more than just everyday sadness or going through a tough time. It’s diagnosed as a medical condition when symptoms interfere with a person’s life for weeks or months. Depression is treatable, and there are ways to feel better.
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Eating Disorders
Eating disorders are more than a lifestyle choice or form of dieting. They are serious, sometimes fatal conditions involving severe alterations in eating behaviors and harmful body image issues. Eating disorders are also treatable and recovery is possible.
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Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) involves recurring thoughts, often uncontrollable, that can cause extreme distress and behaviors — or compulsions — that are repeated many times to help relieve that distress, such as handwashing, putting things in order, and repeatedly rechecking to make sure things are locked or turned off.
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Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Some people develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after experiencing an event that’s so shocking, scary or dangerous, their mind is unable to process it. Examples include natural disasters, accidents, sexual assault, violence, war and abuse. Untreated PTSD can interfere with a person’s ability to fully function.
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Substance Use Disorders
Substance Use Disorder (SUD) — previously called substance abuse and/or addiction — occurs when alcohol or drug use contributes to health issues or interferes with work, school or home life. Substance misuse is associated with long-term health consequences, increased risk of suicide and fatal overdoses.
Get support
Mental health professionals are trained to support people who are struggling with any mental health challenge. If you need immediate help, please use one of the first two resources below to talk to a trained counselor 24/7.
When contacting a resource below, any information you provide will be collected and used by that resource, subject to its end user terms and conditions and privacy policy. Please contact the applicable resource if you would like more information.
Resource | Type | Contact |
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Crisis Text Line | Text Line | Text ACTION to 741-741 |
Lifeline | Call Line | 988 |
Trans Lifeline | Call Line | 877-565-8860 |
The Trevor Project | Website | Visit website |
ADAA Therapist Search | Website | Visit website |
BetterHelp | Website | Visit website |
Talkspace | Website | Visit website |