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Mental health campaigns can cause more harm than good

Monty Donohew writes for the American Thinker about disturbing mental health news.

For decades, the mental health industry and its allies in media, government, and education have operated on a simple assumption: the more mental health awareness we spread, through campaigns, school programs, social media, and public service announcements,  the better. Raise awareness, reduce stigma, encourage help-seeking, and mental health will surely improve.

New evidence shows the opposite is happening. Well-intentioned awareness efforts are actively backfiring, manufacturing distress, inflating diagnoses, and turning normal human emotions into chronic “disorders.” The shocking result is that these campaigns are turning mentally fit people into self-diagnosed mentally ill patients, with symptoms effectively “contracted” from the awareness messages themselves.

A major new review in Nature Reviews Psychology (March 2026) confirms what many conservatives have long suspected: well-meaning mental health awareness efforts can harm more than they help. Titled “The psychological consequences of mental health awareness efforts,” the paper, led by Oxford psychologist Lucy Foulkes, synthesizes experimental evidence showing these campaigns lower the bar for what counts as a “disorder,” train people to pathologize normal emotions, and lock in self-fulfilling “illness identities.”

The authors aren’t anti-awareness radicals: they acknowledge real benefits from such campaigns, such as reduced stigma in some cases and modest increases in help-seeking. Nonetheless, the actual data on harms is damning and growing. …

… The evidence isn’t a handful of anecdotal stories drawn from specific extreme cases.  The review cites over a dozen experimental manipulations (2010–2025) showing causal effects: ADHD workshops doubled false self-diagnosis rates in healthy adults; fake “awareness” videos about nonexistent syndromes produced real symptoms (headaches, nausea); nocebo education experiments proved you can prevent these harms by inoculating people against them.

Despite billions poured into awareness campaigns designed to help and protect our youth, ranging from school programs, TikTok PSAs, corporate “mental health months,” and government initiatives, youth mental health has dramatically worsened. CDC data shows persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness in teens hovering near 40% in recent years. University counseling centers are overwhelmed. Medication use is up. Yet awareness literacy is higher than ever.

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