Today, depression is prevalent among young people. People diagnosed with depression are 5 times more likely to commit suicide than adults and unfortunately 80% of young people who need mental health services are not committed suicide. In the African-Americans community, taboos about mental health issues make it difficult for young people to get help. Friends, families, and carers of the African American community clearly need better ways to support young people who often suffer alone. We know that care is improved by learning from others' experiences such as cancer, chronic illness, mental health etc. However, as the two patients are not identical, this story may be misleading if used to fill patients in a common anecdote.
The most common form of depression among young people is psychological (primary) depression, but it is also the easiest way to treat depression. Psychological depression is usually caused by some tragic or uneasy life experience that may last several months to several years. Still, it should be found and treated early. Symptoms of depression in this form include lack of sustained sorrow or emptiness, emotional hypersensitivity or anger, alcohol or drug abuse, sleep pattern disorder, irritability, headache, or stomach pain, fatigue self-esteem It is difficult to concentrate and remember, but the most serious is the idea of suicide.