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Young Women in Mind

Women aged 17-25 not getting the mental health support they need, says Centre for Mental Health report

​CFC has been involved in a Pilgrim Trust programme to offer and better understand mental health support for young women. 

Young women are twice as likely to experience a mental health problem as young men, but they are being let down by mental health services which aren’t meeting their needs, according to the resulting report by Centre for Mental Health commissioned by the Pilgrim Trust.

More than 30% of young women aged 17-25 have a mental health problem – the highest rate for any age group in England. Young women’s mental health has got dramatically worse over the last decade. Male violence, discrimination, financial pressures, and societal expectations have all put young women’s mental health at greater risk.

Centre for Mental Health’s Empowering Minds report evaluates an innovative programme by the Pilgrim Trust that offers targeted and tailored mental health support for young women through projects across the north of England and Northern Ireland.

Over its first three years, the Pilgrim Trust’s Young Women in Mind programme has supported more than 3,000 young women in a wide range of community-based projects. They offer trauma-informed support that recognises how age and gendered experiences impact on the mental health of young women.

The report finds that mental health support that offers safe and dedicated women only (including trans women) spaces and uses one to one support, counselling, creative therapies and peer support successfully improves young women’s confidence, self-esteem, and wellbeing, as well as their understanding of their own mental health.

The report concludes that embedding the key principles of Young Women in Mind in routine practice is critical to improving young women’s mental health and redressing the current imbalance.

The report calls on the Government to take action to protect young women’s mental health, and the NHS to invest in tailored, trauma-informed support for young women in places they feel safe and heard. Young women must also be involved in creating services that work for them. Without this, young women will continue to be let down.

Andy Bell, chief executive at Centre for Mental Health, said: “Young women’s mental health has declined steeply over the last decade, with double the rate of a common mental health problem than young men. This is a stark health inequality and the product of deeply rooted injustice. The Pilgrim Trust’s Young Women in Mind programme has shown what can be achieved when young women’s needs are understood and prioritised. This must lead to change in health and care systems nationwide.”

Sonja Forbes, Programme Lead at the Pilgrim Trust said: “There is a clear crisis of young women’s mental health. We developed this programme to increase young women’s access to high quality services that meet their specific needs. Effective mental health support for young women must address the distinct experiences of young women that contribute to poor mental health. They often struggle with issues to do with sexual or domestic abuse, societal and cultural expectations, misogyny in schools, unrealistic beauty standards, caring responsibilities, motherhood, and so much more. Trauma-informed and age appropriate services delivered in safe, exclusive spaces are vital to break down barriers and ensure better outcomes for young women.”

Dr Helen Gatenby, Founder of the M13 Youth Project in Manchester, said: "Young women experience complex and often hidden mental health pressures - from trauma and caring responsibilities to inequality, safety concerns and financial stress - yet mainstream services rarely meet their needs. Targeted support is vital so they can access timely, safe, age and gender responsive help. Pilgrim Trust funding has enabled us to provide safe, consistent, local spaces where young women are listened to, believed and receive specialised support. It has strengthened our capacity and impact, giving young women the tools, confidence, stability and networks they need to move forward."

CFC is incredibly proud to have been involved in this project and we continue to support young women with the findings of this report in mind.

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