Global Burden of Mental Disorders 1990–2023: Key Trends Therapists Should Know
Published May 23, 2026
In May 2026, the Lancet published what might be the most comprehensive epidemiological analysis of mental disorders ever conducted. The study — part of the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2023 iteration — analyzed 33 years of data across 204 countries and territories, covering 12 mental disorders. The headline numbers are staggering: 1.17 billion prevalent cases of mental disorders in 2023. That’s roughly 1 in 7 people on the planet.
But the real story is in the trends. And for therapists in private practice, these trends matter — not just as abstract statistics, but as signals about the landscape you’re practicing in.
The Big Picture: 1.17 Billion Cases
The GBD 2023 Mental Disorder Collaborators — over 100 researchers led by Damian Santomauro — estimated 1.17 billion (95% UI: 1.06–1.31 billion) prevalent cases of mental disorders globally in 2023. The age-standardized prevalence rate was 14,210.7 cases per 100,000 population.
Between 1990 and 2023, prevalent cases increased by 95.5% — but this is partly driven by population growth and aging. Even adjusting for these factors, the age-standardized prevalence rate increased by 24.2%. In other words, mental disorders are genuinely becoming more common, not just more diagnosed.
| Metric | 1990 | 2023 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total prevalent cases | ~600 million | 1.17 billion | +95.5% |
| Age-standardized prevalence (per 100k) | ~11,440 | 14,210.7 | +24.2% |
| Total DALYs (disability-adjusted life years) | ~105 million | 171 million | +62.9% |
| Global rank among all disease DALYs | 12th | 5th | ↑ 7 places |
Mental Disorders: Now the Leading Cause of Disability
Perhaps the most striking finding: mental disorders are now the leading cause of years lived with disability (YLDs) globally in 2023, up from second place in 1990. They account for 17.3% of all YLDs worldwide.
The total burden was 171 million DALYs in 2023 — equivalent to losing 171 million years of healthy life. Mental disorders are now the 5th leading cause of all-cause DALYs, up from 12th in 1990. This leap past conditions like cardiovascular disease and cancer in the DALY rankings is a stark illustration of the shifting global disease burden.
Leading Contributors to Mental Disorder DALYs
- Anxiety disorders — ranked 11th among all 304 diseases and injuries at GBD Level 4
- Major depressive disorder — ranked 15th
- Schizophrenia — ranked 41st
Demographic Patterns That Matter for Your Practice
Age: The Peak Is Younger Than You Think
Mental disorder burden peaks in the 15–19 years age group (2,617.3 DALYs per 100,000). This is a critical public health signal. The highest disability burden hits during adolescence and early adulthood — exactly when people are forming identity, building relationships, and establishing career trajectories. Early intervention in this age group isn’t just clinically important; it’s economically vital.
Sex Differences
Across the board, age-standardized DALY rates were higher among females (2,239.6 per 100,000) than males (1,900.2 per 100,000). This is driven primarily by higher rates of anxiety and depressive disorders in women. However, males had higher rates of certain disorders like autism spectrum disorder, conduct disorder, and ADHD.
Regional Variation
Every single country and territory showed increased mental disorder DALY rates in 2023 compared to 1990. But the range is wide:
- Lowest: Vietnam — 1,302.4 DALYs per 100,000
- Highest: Netherlands — 3,555.8 DALYs per 100,000
This gap likely reflects a combination of factors: diagnostic practices, health system capacity, cultural factors around mental health reporting, and genuine differences in prevalence.
Which Disorders Are Rising Fastest?
While all 12 mental disorders showed increases in prevalent cases, some are rising faster than others in terms of age-standardized rates (i.e., the increase isn’t just due to population growth):
| Disorder | Trend in Age-Standardized Prevalence | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Anxiety disorders | Notable increase | Driving much of the overall rise |
| Major depressive disorder | Notable increase | Post-pandemic trends accelerating |
| Anorexia nervosa | Notable increase | Rising particularly in younger females |
| Schizophrenia | Notable increase | May reflect better detection and diagnosis |
What This Means for Private Practice
This isn’t just an academic exercise. These trends have real implications for your practice — now and in the coming years.
Demand Will Keep Growing
The data is unequivocal: mental health needs are rising globally, across every demographic and every region. If you’re worried about filling your caseload, you shouldn’t be. The demand is there and it’s growing. What you should be worried about is positioning yourself to serve the clients who need you most — which is where thoughtful private practice marketing comes in.
Prepare for Younger Clients
The peak burden in 15–19 year olds suggests that therapists who work with adolescents and young adults will see sustained and increasing demand. If this isn’t your niche now, consider whether it should be — or at minimum, whether your marketing should acknowledge that you work with this demographic.
The Socioeconomic Gradient
DALY rates ranged from 1,853.0 per 100,000 (middle SDI countries) to 2,184.1 (high SDI countries). Middle SDI countries had the lowest burden — a finding that may reflect both genuine protective factors and under-diagnosis. For therapists, this is a reminder that mental health does not distribute equally. Being aware of socioeconomic factors in your client population isn’t optional — it’s clinical competence.
Anxiety Is the Big Story
Anxiety disorders ranked 11th among all global disease burden causes — higher than major depressive disorder. This aligns with what many clinicians are seeing in their offices: anxiety is the dominant presenting problem of this era. If you have specialized training in anxiety treatment, highlight it. If you don’t, consider getting it.
A Sobering Call to Action
The GBD collaborators end their paper with a pointed statement: “Responding to the mental health needs of our global population, especially those most vulnerable, is an obligation, not a choice.”
They call for stronger surveillance systems, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. They call for “more coordinated and inclusive policies.” And they emphasize that early treatment and prevention — tailored to sex and age differences — are the path forward.
For therapists in private practice, the implications are clear. You are on the front lines of the single largest contributor to global disability. The work you do matters — not just to your individual clients, but to the broader picture of global health. Staying informed about the research, honing your skills, and making your services accessible is not just good business. It’s an obligation.
Further Reading
The full study is open-access in the Lancet. The IHME summary on the Health Data website offers a digestible overview. For more on how to build a practice that meets rising demand, see our guide on starting a private practice.
Citation: GBD 2023 Mental Disorder Collaborators (2026). Updated trends in the global prevalence and burden of mental disorders, 1990–2023: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2023. The Lancet, 407(10543), 2040–2064. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(26)00519-2