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National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing: Follow up Study

Selected results from the Follow up Study component of the National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing

Released
5/06/2024

About the Follow up Study

This article presents information from the Follow up Study component of the 2020–2022 National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing (NSMHW).

The NSMHW was conducted between December 2020 and October 2022. Respondents in the NSMHW were invited to participate in a short Follow up Study, conducted by web form or telephone around 12 months after each respondent had completed their NSMHW interview.

Questions asked in the Follow up Study focussed on the 12-month period prior to the Follow up Study. Topics included how respondents rated their mental health, consultations with health professionals for their mental health, and strategies they had employed for their mental health in that period. For the Data Item List and microdata for the Follow up Study, see Microdata: National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing.

The ABS would like to thank participants for their involvement in the Follow up Study. 

Reporting data from the Follow up Study

Unlike the NSMHW, the Follow up Study was not designed to provide nationally representative estimates for the Australian population, nor to re-estimate prevalence of mental disorders (see National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing for prevalence data). No adjustments have been made to account for factors such as undercoverage in the Follow up Study data. Additionally, results presented in this article for both the Follow up Study and NSMHW are unweighted. For more information see Methodology.

Results in this article therefore represent only those respondents who participated in the Follow up Study. While these results provide insights into Follow up Study respondents’ experiences over time, care should be exercised when making inferences about these results more broadly. These results are not representative of the general population. This should be noted when reporting data from the Follow Up Study. 

The ABS uses, and supports the use of, the Mindframe guidelines on responsible, accurate and safe reporting on mental health concerns. The ABS recommends referring to these guidelines when reporting on statistics in this report.

Crisis support services

Some of the statistics in this article may cause distress. Services you can contact are detailed here:

Available 24 hours, 7 days a week

Lifeline: 13 11 14 

Suicide Call Back Service: 1300 659 467 

Beyond Blue: 1300 224 636

QLife: 1800 084 527, 3pm to midnight, 7 days

MensLine Australia: 1300 789 978

Kids Helpline: 1800 551 800

13YARN: 13 92 76

For further information see Mental health resources.

People who had a 12-month mental disorder

There were 1,019 people aged 18-85 years in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder according to their responses in their NSMHW interview. Results in this article represent only those 1,019 people and not all people with a 12-month mental disorder. While these results provide insights into Follow up Study respondents’ experiences over time, care should be exercised when making inferences about these results more broadly.

Self-assessed mental health

Respondents in the Follow up Study were asked to rate their current mental health and compare it with their mental health one year earlier.

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder, around one quarter (27%) reported in their Follow up Study that they had excellent or very good mental health, one third (33%) reported good mental health, and two in five (40%) reported fair or poor mental health.

  1. As determined by their NSMHW interview responses, people who met diagnostic criteria for having a mental disorder at some time in their life and had sufficient symptoms of that disorder in the 12 months prior to when they completed the survey.

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder, around two in five (38%) said that their mental health was a lot or a little better than one year earlier. A similar proportion reported that their mental health was the same (41%), while around one in five (21%) said their mental health was a little or a lot worse.

  1. As determined by their NSMHW interview responses, people who met diagnostic criteria for having a mental disorder at some time in their life and had sufficient symptoms of that disorder in the 12 months prior to when they completed the survey.

Consultations with health professionals for mental health

Respondents in the Follow up Study were asked about their consultations with health professionals for mental health in the last 12 months.

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder, almost half (47%) saw a health professional for their mental health in the 12 months prior to their Follow up Study. This is the same as the proportion who had seen a health professional for their mental health in the 12 months prior to their NSMHW interview (47%). More than one third (36%) saw a health professional for their mental health in both 12-month periods, while around two in five (41%) did not see a health professional for their mental health in either 12-month period.

Other services for mental health accessed using digital technologies

Respondents in the Follow up Study were also asked about other services for their mental health they accessed using phone, internet or other digital technologies.

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder, slightly more than one in five (22%) accessed other services for their mental health using phone, internet, or another digital technology in the 12 months prior to their Follow up Study. Almost one in five (18%) accessed other services for their mental health using phone, internet, or another digital technology in the 12 months prior to their NSMHW interview. 

Use of mental health-related medications

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder, more than a third (37%) were dispensed at least one Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) subsidised mental health-related medication in the 12 months prior to their Follow up Study, similar to the proportion who had been dispensed at least one PBS subsidised mental health-related medication in the 12 months prior to their NSMHW interview (36%). Almost one third (31%) were dispensed at least one PBS subsidised mental health-related medication in both 12-month periods, while almost three in five (58%) were not dispensed a PBS subsidised mental health-related medication in either 12-month period.

Self-management strategies for mental health

Respondents in the Follow up Study were asked about self-management strategies they used for their mental health in the past 12 months.

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder, around nine in ten (89%) had used self-management strategies for their mental health in the previous 12 months. This is the same as the proportion who had used self-management strategies for their mental health in the 12 months prior to their NSMHW interview (89%).

Of the 1,019 people in the Follow up Study who had a 12-month mental disorder:

  • Just over half (51%) increased their level of exercise or physical activity in the 12-month period prior to the Follow up Study
  • Half (50%) practised thinking positively and setting achievable goals in the 12-month period prior to the Follow up Study.
  1. As determined by their NSMHW interview responses, people who met diagnostic criteria for having a mental disorder at some time in their life and had sufficient symptoms of that disorder in the 12 months prior to when they completed the survey.

Methodology

How the data is collected

How the data is processed

How the data is released

Glossary

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