Mind the Gap: The Cost of Mental Health Disparities

Published 2024-07-24
One in five U.S. adults live with a mental illness, yet access to treatment remains a challenge. This is especially true for lower-income individuals and minority populations who bear a disproportionate burden of both mental health and chronic conditions, which are intrinsically connected, exacerbating the economic hardships they face. In fact, treatment rates among adults vary greatly across demographic groups.

According to NAMI, Non-Hispanic White adults (52%) are more than twice as likely to receive treatment for a mental illness compared to Asian Americans (25%). Those numbers increase modestly among the Hispanic or Latino (36%) and Black or African American (39%) communities but still do not achieve parity. A new report from the School of Global Health at Meharry Medical College examines the projected impact on the U.S. economy if mental health inequities are not addressed, and the findings are staggering.

What barriers prevent racial and ethnic minority groups, as well as other marginalized, rural, and under-resourced populations, from accessing treatment? What are the unique mental health needs of racially and ethnically diverse communities? What is the economic cost of not investing in mental health services, treatments, and programs? What can Washington do to help fix these inequities? And how can we change the conversation around minority mental health to reduce stigma and encourage more integrated, equitable care?

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