%D 2016 %C Leeds, UK %T Mental health and wellbeing in England: Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey 2014. A survey carried out for NHS Digital by NatCen Social Research and the Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester %E S McManus %E P Bebbington %E R Jenkins %E T Brugha %I NHS Digital %L discovery1518055 %O Published by NHS Digital part of the Government Statistical Service. NHS Digital is the trading name of the Health and Social Care Information Centre. Copyright © 2016. You may re-use this publication (not including logos) free of charge in any format or medium, under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 (www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence). %X TRENDS IN MENTAL ILLNESS: • One adult in six had a common mental disorder (CMD): about one woman in five and one man in eight. Since 2000, overall rates of CMD in England steadily increased in women and remained largely stable in men. • Reported rates of self-harming increased in men and women and across age groups since 2007. However, much of this increase in reporting may have been due to greater awareness about the behaviour. • Young women have emerged as a high-risk group, with high rates of CMD, selfharm, and positive screens for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and bipolar disorder. The gap between young women and young men increased. • Most mental disorders were more common in people living alone, in poor physical health, and not employed. Claimants of Employment and Support Allowance (ESA), a benefit aimed at those unable to work due to poor health or disability, experienced particularly high rates of all the disorders assessed. TRENDS IN TREATMENT AND SERVICE USE: • One person in three with CMD reported current use of mental health treatment in 2014, an increase from the one in four who reported this in 2000 and 2007. This was driven by steep increases in reported use of psychotropic medication. Increased use of psychological therapies was also evident among people with more severe CMD symptoms. • There were demographic inequalities in who received treatment. After controlling for level of need, people who were White British, female, or in mid-life (especially aged 35 to 54) were more likely to receive treatment. People in the Black ethnic group had particularly low treatment rates. • Socioeconomic inequalities in treatment use were less evident, although people living in lower income households were more likely to have requested but not received a particular mental health treatment. • Since 2007, people with CMD had become more likely to use community services and more likely to discuss their mental health with a GP.