How to Get Mental Health Treatment in the Complex, Messy, Costly US System

Treatment options, roadblocks and tactics to help you or a loved one get the help that’s needed

The Conversation U.S.
Wise & Well

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By Bryan Cochran, Professor of Psychology and Director of Clinical Training, University of Montana

Many Americans are not getting the mental health care they need. SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images

The percentage of Americans seeking mental health treatment nearly doubled between 2004 and 2022, with almost a quarter of the population reporting that they saw a mental health care professional in 2022.

This surge in help-seeking has many potential explanations. The pandemic, along with other external stressors, led to unprecedented high rates of anxiety and depression across all age groups.

Yet the majority of Americans with a mental health condition are not receiving adequate treatment or any treatment at all.

People who are pondering getting help face a lot of decisions with little information about how to navigate the system available to them.

As a licensed clinical psychologist and director of clinical training for a clinical psychology program at the University of Montana in Missoula, I spend a lot of time thinking about how to increase folks’ access to treatment. I also field a lot of practical questions that people have about the…

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The Conversation U.S.
Wise & Well

An independent, nonprofit news organization dedicated to unlocking the ideas and knowledge of academic experts for the public.