Stress in America 2023: A nation recovering from collective trauma
APA’s survey data suggests that the COVID-19 pandemic, global conflict, racism and racial injustice, inflation, and climate-related disasters are all weighing on the collective consciousness of Americans
概览

收录于
2026年3月7日
相关情境
受众
parent
年级范围
幼儿园–十二年级(高四)
页面类型
Article
关键词
Stress Trauma Disasters and Response
简介
Stress in America 2023: Collective Trauma and Long-Term Health
- Core Finding: The APA identifies a "collective trauma" among Americans, where the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic—compounded by inflation, global conflict, racism, and climate disasters—has created lasting psychological and physical health impacts.
- Physical and Mental Health Trends:
- Chronic Illness: 66% of adults report a diagnosed chronic illness, yet 81% still rate their physical health as "good or better."
- Mental Health Diagnoses: 37% of adults report a diagnosed mental health condition (up from 32% in 2019), primarily anxiety (24%) and depression (23%).
- Age-Specific Impact (35–44): This cohort saw the sharpest increases in chronic illness (48% to 58%) and mental health diagnoses (31% to 45%) since 2019.
- Age-Specific Impact (18–34): This group reports the highest rate of mental illness (50% in 2023).
- Barriers to Coping:
- Downplaying Stress: 67% of adults feel their problems are not "bad enough" to warrant stress compared to others.
- Isolation: 62% do not discuss stress to avoid burdening others; 66% felt they needed more emotional support in the last year.
- Stigma/Access: Barriers to seeking help include beliefs that therapy is ineffective (40%), lack of time (39%), and lack of insurance (37%).
- Primary Stressors:
- Societal: Future of the nation (68%), violence/crime (61%), U.S. debt (57%), and mass shootings (56%).
- Personal: Health-related issues (65%), the economy (64%), and money (63%).
- Media/Politics: 50% are stressed by news coverage, and 59% are stressed by political discourse failing to address their priorities.
- Future Outlook: Stress is actively hindering long-term planning; 28% of adults have struggled to plan for the future, and 33% feel too stressed to even think about it.
- Physiological Risks: Chronic stress keeps the body on "high alert," contributing to inflammation, immune system degradation, digestive issues, heart disease, and stroke.
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