A Global Crisis No One Can Ignore

By Samantha Karraa

What the world’s largest mind health study reveals — and why Fresh Hope has been on the right path all along.

I kept working, kept smiling, kept meeting my responsibilities. But inside I felt exhausted, empty, and afraid.

— Sergio, Guatemala/Mexico — living with depression and anxiety

Sergio is 49 years old. He is a sales advisor, a son, a friend, and a man who loves God. From the outside, no one could have guessed that anything was wrong. He was showing up every day — professionally, relationally, spiritually. But inside, something was quietly breaking.

His story is not unusual. In fact, according to the most comprehensive study of global mind health ever conducted, Sergio’s experience represents a growing crisis that is hiding in plain sight — not just in Latin America, not just in the United States, but in every corner of the Internet-connected world.

 

The Numbers Behind the Crisis

In February 2026, Sapien Labs — an independent nonprofit research organization — released its Global Mind Health Report, drawing on data from over 2.5 million people across 85 countries. The findings paint a sobering picture of the state of human mental wellbeing, particularly among young adults.

41%

of adults aged 18–34 are experiencing mental health challenges of clinical significance — meaning their struggles substantially impact their ability to function in daily life.

 

Young adults ages 18–34 are four times more likely to be in distress than adults 55 and older.

 

36

The average Mind Health Quotient (MHQ) score for young adults globally — placing them in the “Enduring” range, simply getting through each day rather than truly living.

The Mind Health Quotient is not simply a measure of happiness or a checklist for depression. It measures 47 aspects of cognitive, emotional, social, and physical function — our actual capacity to navigate life’s challenges and contribute productively to the world around us. A score of 36 means that on average, young adults today are barely enduring life.

And the most startling finding? The wealthier the country, the worse the mind health of its young adults. Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa actually lead the world in young adult mind health, while nations in Western Europe, the English-speaking world, and East Asia fall to the bottom of the rankings.

 

The Hidden Face of Suffering

One of the most important things this research confirms is something that those of us in mental health ministry have always known: suffering is rarely visible from the outside.

Sergio described it this way: for a long time, he kept going. He smiled. He worked. He fulfilled his obligations. But internally, his mind was exhausted and his peace had been stolen. The anxiety whispered that he wasn’t enough. The depression was quiet but constant.

The hardest part was accepting the need for help. It cost me to recognize that it wasn’t weakness — it was a real condition.

— Sergio

 

This is the hidden face of the global crisis. The Sapien Labs data captures it precisely: people in the “Enduring” and “Struggling” ranges are not necessarily visibly falling apart. Many are functioning — going to work, raising children, attending church — while quietly losing the capacity to truly live.

The research also confirms something else: this crisis is not evenly distributed across age groups. Adults over 55 maintain average mind health scores of around 101 — right where a healthy population should be. But each younger generation scores lower than the one before. Young adults in the early 2000s reported the greatest wellbeing of any age group. Today’s young adults are reporting the worst.

 

This Is What Fresh Hope Was Built For

Fresh Hope was founded on a simple but radical conviction: that it is possible to live well despite a mental health diagnosis, because of the hope found in Christ. That conviction has always been countercultural. It has always said that the answer to mental suffering is not found only in a prescription or a clinical protocol — it is found in community, in faith, in honest conversation, and in the lived wisdom of people who have walked the same road.

The Sapien Labs research, drawing on over a million responses in 2024 and 2025 alone, is now confirming what Fresh Hope has practiced for years. The four strongest predictors of healthy minds in young adults are: strong family bonds, active spirituality, delayed smartphone use, and lower consumption of ultra-processed food. These are not medical interventions. They are dimensions of life — relational, spiritual, physical — that our culture has been quietly eroding for two decades.

In the coming blogs in this series, we will look at each of these factors in depth — what the research says, what the Fresh Hope model addresses, and what real people in our community have experienced. Because data without story is just numbers. And story without data is just anecdote. Together, they make a compelling case.

 

A Word to Anyone Who Is “Just Getting Through”

If you are reading this and you recognize yourself in Sergio’s words — if you are showing up on the outside while struggling on the inside — we want you to know something directly: you are not alone, you are not broken, and you are not failing at faith.

The global mind health crisis is real. It is measured. It affects hundreds of millions of people. And it is not the result of personal weakness or spiritual failure. It is the result of a world that has been quietly stripping away the very things the human mind and soul need most.

Fresh Hope taught me to live and to feel that I am not alone — that my diagnosis does not define me as a person, that I can live with purpose even in the middle of the process.

— Sergio

That is the promise of Fresh Hope. Not that the struggle disappears. Not that every day is easy. But that you do not have to walk it alone — and that the God who created your mind has not let go of your hand.

NEXT IN THIS SERIES

Blog 2: Spirituality Is Not Optional — It Is Essential

The world’s largest mind health study now confirms what Scripture has always declared: connection to God is not a spiritual luxury — it is a measurable factor in human flourishing.

 

ABOUT FRESH HOPE

Fresh Hope is an international network of Christian peer-support groups for those living with a mental health diagnosis and their loved ones. With 250+ weekly participants across 39+ countries, Fresh Hope integrates evidence-based recovery principles with faith-centered community. Find a group near you at freshhope.us

 

RESEARCH REFERENCE

Sapien Labs. Global Mind Health in 2025. February 2026. sapienlabs.org

Share this Post:

Join Our Newsletter

SIGN UP AT THE TOP RIGHT OF THE WEBSITE

Webinar "How Churches Can Facilitate Access to Mental Health Care"

Register Here to Watch Free!

Webinar "What I Wish My Pastor Knew About Mental Health"

Register Here to Watch Free!

Take the First Step in Starting Your Own
Fresh Hope Support Group

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name(Required)
Country(Required)

Please fill out this form so we can provide you with more details on how to start a Hope Coach Ministry.

Best time to contact

Enter your information and we will contact you about becoming a Hope Coach

Best time to contact

What Your Gift Can Do for
Offering Hope to the Hopeless

For every 32 cents given, we are able to offer hope for a week to one person who has a mental health challenge.

For every $16.64 given annually, we are able to offer hope for one year to one person.

Any amount you are able to give will help bring hope to those who desperately need it.

What type of donation would you like to make?

Enter your information to speak with a Hope Coach

Best time to contact

Thank you for taking the next step
towards hope.

We want to make sure that we send you information that will best serve your needs, so please take a few moments to fill in the information below.

(Please note that your privacy is our utmost concern. Fresh Hope will never sell your data and your information is kept strictly confidential)

Name

Address

Phone / Email

The following best describes me