Germany’s youth are facing significant barriers to accessing mental health care, with many waiting months for critical therapeutic support. Despite a rising demand for psychiatric and psychotherapeutic services—intensified by recent global crises—the country’s healthcare system is struggling to provide timely care. A shortage of insurance-approved practitioner seats has left many vulnerable young people without immediate assistance, raising concerns among families and healthcare professionals about the long-term impact on youth well-being.
- Young people in Germany face extensive waiting times, often stretching over several months, to secure professional mental health treatment.
- The demand for youth psychotherapeutic services has increased significantly, driven in part by the long-term psychological impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- A major bottleneck in the system is the limited number of licensed therapist seats funded by public health insurance providers.
- Medical professionals and families are calling for urgent structural reforms to expand treatment capacity and prevent mental health conditions from worsening.
DW News is a global news TV program broadcast by German public state-owned international broadcaster Deutsche Welle (DW).
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They don't like their current government and don't want to go to war for Ursula & Co. Surely they must have mental health issues..
This is really sad and I hope that the government realizes that by not investing in mental health services it will end up costing them much more in the long run
Tberapy is tosh.
They need jobs and the assurance that there is still a future for them in Germany. That is the where the mental sickness originate.
We will have fun with all the kids who aren't treated now in the future. It is insanity.
The situation is much the same in Japan.
I thought there would be psychologists at schools who would act as a first line of defence in these cases.
1 in 8 Germans are addicted to drugs or/and alcohol. That means addiction affects almost every family. Obviously, children are affected
Get off your phone