Mental health: data in Scotland & international comparisons
Scotland
ScotPHO publish mental health data that are nationally comparable and available at local level for council areas as mental health profiles.
The Scottish Burden of Disease Study publishes mental health data by Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY), Years of Life Lost (YLL), and Years Lived in Disability (YLD), at national, regional, NHS Board, and local authority levels. In 2019, the age-standardised DALY rate for mental health disorders in Scotland was 2,494 per 100,000 population. The latest Scottish Burden of Disease Study report (724kB) was published in November 2022.
Public Health Scotland also publishes information on mental health inpatient activity including time trends for Scotland, NHS boards and local authorities, and statistics by patient age, gender, deprivation level, urban rural status and diagnosis.
Updated sets of national mental health indicators for adults and for children and young people were published by Public Health Scotland in March 2022. These indicator sets refresh and build on the 2007 indicator sets. More information is available at the Public Health Scotland Children and Young People Mental Health Indicators and the Adult Mental Health Indicators pages.
International comparisons
The Global Burden of Disease study provides international estimates, including estimates at Scottish level, for the prevalence of mental health conditions. Although there are a wide range of assumptions used to make these comparisons, this is one of the few sources of comparable data.
Two European-level surveys, the Eurobarometer survey (which includes a set of questions relating to mental health problems and mental wellbeing) and the European study of the Epidemiology of Mental Disorders/Mental Health Disability (ESEMeD), provide information for comparisons across most EU countries. However, neither of these surveys provide Scottish or UK-level data: Great Britain did participate in the Eurobarometer survey, but a low response rate meant that this data was excluded from analysis (Lehtinen et al 2005).
A 2004 European Union report The State of Mental Health in the European Union (2.54MB) concluded that although many surveys which include mental health measures have been conducted across Europe, the differences in survey techniques and research methods make real comparisons almost impossible. The report compared data on psychological distress from the ESEMed study with that of the psychiatric morbidity among adults living in private households survey. The comparison showed that the UK and the Netherlands had the lowest psychological distress, with France and Italy having the highest psychological distress.
Please note: If you require the most up-to-date data available, please check the data sources directly as new data may have been published since these data pages were last updated. Although we endeavour to ensure that the data pages are kept up-to-date, there may be a time lag between new data being published and the relevant ScotPHO web pages being updated.