Skip to main content

Verified by Psychology Today

Gender

Gender Gaps in Mental Wellbeing

Nonbinary adults face challenges to mental wellbeing, research shows.

Key points

  • Women have slightly lower mental wellbeing scores than men, whereas nonbinary/third gender adults have significantly lower mental health scores.
  • More than 50 percent of nonbinary/third gender people are at risk for mental health disorders and have the highest level of suicidal thoughts.
  • Gender gaps in wellbeing between men and women vary by country and by age, with differences in wellbeing diminishing and reversing in older ages.
Tom Mossholder/Pexels
Source: Tom Mossholder/Pexels

The American Psychiatric Association reports that 1 in 5 women have a mental health disorder while other reports from the Trevor Project highlight that mental health challenges disproportionately impact those who identify as transgender. The Mental Health Million project, a global ongoing study of the evolving mental wellbeing of the world finds interesting gender differences and trends recently published in the Mental State of the World report, which I co-authored.

Gender gaps in mental wellbeing

Overall, women had mental wellbeing scores just a few points lower overall relative to men while those who identified as nonbinary/third gender had strikingly lower mental wellbeing compared to either men or women. On average, MHQ scores (a score that equates to overall mental wellbeing) were 50 points lower for nonbinary/third gender respondents (average MHQ of 22) compared to men, with more than 50 percent being clinically at risk for a mental health disorder. Those who responded as nonbinary/third gender also had the highest level of suicidal thoughts and intentions. This is in line with recent reports from the Trevor Project, which found that over half of transgender and nonbinary youth had seriously considered attempting suicide in the past year.

Sapien Labs
Source: Sapien Labs

Those who responded as nonbinary/third gender also reported the greatest drop in mental wellbeing in 2020 compared to 2019, declining 51 points compared to a drop of 28 points in men and 19 points in women. This suggests that this group may also be disproportionately affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Sapien Labs
MHQ scores for each gender group across each functional dimension
Source: Sapien Labs

Gender differences in dimensions of mental wellbeing

Overall, men and women differed most along the dimensions of "Mind-Body Connection" and "Mood & Outlook" though there was still only a 3 to 5 percent difference along these dimension scales. Relative to men, women had greater experience of pain and feelings of fear and anxiety. Conversely, men had greater issues with addictions and feelings of empathy than women. For those who responded as nonbinary/third gender, the differences were around the dimensions of "Social Self" and "Drive & Motivation." Worryingly, relative to men or women, this group had substantially more troubles with suicidal thoughts or intentions and a greater sense of being detached from reality.

Sapien Labs
Male-female gender gap by age (more positive = males have higher mental wellbeing)
Source: Sapien Labs

A gender gap that diminishes with age...

While women were slightly lower overall, this was not the case for all age groups. For young adults aged 18 to 24, there was a sizable gender gap of 17 MHQ score points (6 percent of the MHQ scale) with men reporting higher mental wellbeing compared to women. The gap was progressively lower for older generations, reversing in direction for those aged 65+ with women faring better at these older ages. Notably, at all ages, the differences between men and women were many-fold smaller than the overall generational gaps we’ve reported previously.

Sapien Labs
Male-female gender gap across respondents living in different countries (more positive = males have higher mental wellbeing)
Source: Sapien Labs

...and varies across countries

The gender gap between men and women varied across the eight English-speaking countries, with most populations reporting slightly higher mental wellbeing for men compared to women. It was considerably larger, however, for Singapore (+16 MHQ points or 5 percent of the MHQ scale) compared to other countries. On the other hand, the United Kingdom had gender parity overall, and the gap was reversed in New Zealand where women were higher overall. In these countries, higher MHQ scores for men persisted in the 18 to 24 age range but quickly reached parity thereafter and reversed in favor of women after age 55.

Altogether, this suggests that social and cultural drivers may explain much of the overall differences between men and women although differences along specific dimensions may be biological in nature. On the other hand, the underlying causes of challenges for nonbinary/third gender individuals are more difficult to untangle. While the fraction of the global population who are nonbinary or third gender is estimated at approximately 0.5 percent, estimates are ambiguous (in our data 0.9 percent identified as being nonbinary). With studies suggesting that this percentage is rising, working to understand and mitigate the social, cultural and biological traumas and adversities that these individuals experience is essential.

The Mental Health Million project will be able to look longitudinally to see how these different populations fare in their next decade, providing increasingly deeper insight that can help drive mitigating strategies and track their success.

advertisement
More from Jennifer Newson Ph.D.
More from Psychology Today