'Kind' Environments Foster Mentally Healthy Youth, Study Finds

Young people who describe their environments as "kind" are more likely to be mentally healthy, a study funded by the Born This Way Foundation finds.

Conducted by the Benenson Strategy Group, the study, Kind Communities: A Bridge to Youth Mental Health (21 pages, HTML), employed a short version of the Mental Health Inventory developed by the RAND Corporation. The survey asks, "How much of the time, during the past month have you 1) been a happy person; 2) felt calm and peaceful; 3) been a very nervous person; 4) felt downhearted and blue; and 5) felt so down in the dumps that nothing could cheer you up. According to the report, youth who describe their environment — whether a high school, college, or workplace — as "kind" are more likely to be mentally healthy.

The survey, which included interviews of more than three thousand young people between the ages of 15 and 24 and over a thousand parents, found that youth rely on a small set of close friends for support, though they also discuss concerns with their parents. However, respondents indicated that when they do talk with their parents about important issues, parents often don’t understand what’s going on with their children emotionally.

The study also found that young people are eager to empower themselves with knowledge and skills to support their own wellness — or assist a friend who might be in crisis — but say that they need more resources to help them do so.

"Kind Communities – A Bridge to Youth Mental Wellness." Born This Way Foundation Press Release 07/27/2017.