Internal Practice Data Analysis · Sydney · 2011–2025 · Published 19 May 2026

Anxiety Has Replaced Relationships as the Defining Reason People Seek Counselling: A 15-Year Practice Dataset, 2011–2025

36,309 clients. 139,687 appointments. One Sydney private practice. Four shifts in fifteen years that align with what international datasets are also showing.

25.8% Anxiety, female clients vs 24.9% relationship issues - anxiety now ranks #1
12.2% vs 8.6% Female work stress now exceeds male First reversal in 15 years of clinical data
0.6% → 2.8% Burnout, share of clients 2011 → 2025: ~5-fold rise as a share of clients (6 → 69 in raw count)
0.84% vs 0.82% Male and female suicidal-ideation help-seeking, near-equal vs a 3.2× male death rate nationally

About this report. This is a longitudinal case study from one multi-location private practice in Sydney, Australia. It is not a population sample and it is not a global mental-health study. The Sydney data is presented alongside WHO, OECD, Eurostat, ABS and other public datasets so readers can see where the practice-level pattern aligns with - and where it diverges from - broader international evidence.

Four shifts identified in 15 years of Sydney clinical data - each visible in international datasets

Across 36,309 clients seen between 2011 and 2025 in one Sydney private counselling practice, four shifts stand out. None of them is unique to Sydney. Each aligns with a pattern documented at population or workforce level by the World Health Organization, OECD, Eurostat, the UK Office for National Statistics, the UK Health and Safety Executive, the Australian Bureau of Statistics, and other public bodies. The role of this dataset is to document those shifts at the level of the consulting room: who is presenting, with what, and how that has changed.

Shift 1 - Anxiety overtakes relationships 25.8%

Anxiety is now the leading presenting issue for female clients (25.8%), narrowly ahead of relationship issues (24.9%). Aligns with the WHO finding that global anxiety and depression prevalence rose 25% in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, with women more affected than men.

Shift 2 - Women's work stress surpasses men's 12.2% vs 8.6%

For the first time in this 15-year dataset, female clients (12.2%) cite work stress as a primary issue at a higher rate than male clients (8.6%). Aligns with Gallup's 2025 finding that women report consistently higher daily worry and stress than men globally.

Shift 3 - Burnout grows ~5-fold as a share of clients 0.6% → 2.8%

In 2011, 6 of 982 clients (0.6%) presented for burnout. By 2025, 69 of 2,427 (2.8%) did - a roughly five-fold rise as a share of clients once practice growth is taken into account. Raw client count rose 11-fold over the same period. Aligns with WHO's 2019 inclusion of burn-out in ICD-11 as an occupational phenomenon, and with Gallup and McKinsey survey evidence that women experience burnout at substantially higher rates than men.

Shift 4 - The male suicide help-seeking gap 3.2×

Men in this practice presented for help with suicidal ideation at almost the same rate as women (0.84% vs 0.82%) - yet die by suicide nationally at 3.2× the female rate. This 3.2× ratio matches the WHO global figure for high-income countries.

Across fifteen years of practice data, the reasons people walk into the consulting room have changed more than the people themselves. Anxiety has displaced relationships at the top of the list for women. Women's work stress has, for the first time, exceeded men's. Burnout is now a recognisable clinical category in a way it simply was not in 2011. And men continue to die by suicide at three times the rate of women, while seeking help at the same rate. Dan Auerbach - Clinical Director, Associated Counsellors & Psychologists Sydney
About this analysis · Media enquiries
Dan Auerbach - Clinical Director, Associated Counsellors & Psychologists Sydney
Available for interview on what clinicians are seeing on the ground and what these shifts mean for how mental-health services should be designed and resourced. Underlying data and demographic cuts available on request.
Media: press@primespotpr.com · PrimeSpot PR

Shift 1: Anxiety has overtaken relationship issues as the leading reason women seek counselling

For the first time in fifteen years of intake data from this Sydney practice, anxiety has become the most common primary presenting issue for female clients, narrowly ahead of relationship issues. For male clients, relationship issues remain the top category. The Sydney shift maps onto a body of international evidence indicating that anxiety prevalence - particularly among women - has been on a structural upward path since 2020.

Female clients - top presenting issues, 2011–2025 (% of female clients, n=11,026)

Anxiety now sits at the top of the list. Work stress is the fourth most common presenting issue for female clients. Source: ACPS internal client intake records, 2011–2025.

Anxiety presentations, female clients - annual rate

Female anxiety rate jumped from a 2011–19 average of 12.5% to a 2021 peak of 24.3%, settling at 17.8% in 2025 - well above any pre-pandemic year.

Anxiety vs relationship issues - female clients, 2025

In 2025, anxiety (25.8%) is the leading primary issue for female clients, narrowly ahead of relationship issues (24.9%). For male clients (not shown), relationship issues remain #1 (27.4%) with anxiety #2 (18.1%).

How this aligns with international data

Population-level anxiety prevalence rose globally - and the gender gap widened - over the same window

The Sydney practice data captures, at clinical level, a shift that appears in larger international datasets. US clinician surveys are reporting the same caseload shift in aggregate, and the strongest direct parallels - large, peer-reviewed, national counselling-service datasets that have documented an "anxiety overtakes another presenting issue" pattern within the same 15-year window - come from Australia and the UK:

  • APA 2023 Practitioner Pulse Survey (US, n=561 psychologists): 68% of US psychologists who treat anxiety reported increased anxiety patients versus the prior 12 months - the largest year-on-year increase of any disorder, ahead of trauma (50%) and depression (45%). At clinician level, in aggregate, US psychologists are reporting the same caseload shift the Sydney practice is reporting from its own intake records. Source: American Psychological Association, 2023 Practitioner Pulse Survey.
  • CDC Household Pulse Survey (US, April 2020 – September 2024, 16,795 data points): female anxiety symptoms exceeded male anxiety symptoms in every cycle by 5–9 percentage points (e.g. August–September 2024: 20.2% female vs 15.0% male). 2024 prevalence remains approximately 2× the 2019 NHIS baseline of 8.1%. Source: US CDC, Household Pulse Survey.
  • headspace Australia - Rickwood et al. 2023, PLOS ONE (n=58,233 first-presenting youth): at Australia's national youth mental health service, the primary presenting symptom in 2019–20 was anxiety (41.85% of cases), ahead of depression (33.36%). The authors note that "anxiety symptoms were the most common primary presenting issue in 2019–2020 followed by depressive symptoms, whereas the opposite order was evident in 2015." This is, to date, the only peer-reviewed Australian counselling dataset documenting anxiety overtaking another presenting issue as #1, on the same primary-presenting-issue methodology. Source: Rickwood et al., PLOS ONE, 2023.
  • NHS Talking Therapies / IAPT (UK, 11 consecutive years, 2014–15 to 2024–25): approximately 1.8 million referrals in 2024–25. Anxiety has been the #1 categorised presenting problem every single year, running 1.1 to 1.9× the volume of depression. Female share of referrals is consistently 64–67%. NHS England's data confirms that, at the largest publicly reported counselling service in the world, anxiety has been the dominant presenting issue throughout the equivalent period. Source: NHS Digital / NHS England, NHS Talking Therapies Annual Reports 2014–15 to 2024–25.
  • Mind / Welsh youth counselling, Big Mental Health Report 2024: anxiety as a presenting issue rose from 12% in 2015–16 to 46% in 2022–23 in Welsh youth counselling services - a dramatic UK regional rise mirroring the post-2020 shift the Sydney practice documents. Source: Mind, The Big Mental Health Report 2024.
  • Australian Bureau of Statistics - National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing 2020–22 (n=15,893 households): anxiety disorders are the #1 mental disorder class in Australia at 17.2% 12-month prevalence (3.4 million Australians). Women 21.1%, men 13.3%. Women aged 16–24: 40.4%. Prevalence has risen from 13.8% in 2007 - the largest increase of any disorder class. Source: ABS NSMHW, latest release.
  • Slade et al. 2024 (ANZJP): peer-reviewed companion analysis of the ABS NSMHW. Statistically significant rise in anxiety 2007 → 2020–22: overall OR 1.40 (1.26–1.55); women specifically OR 1.41 (1.22–1.62). Source: Slade T. et al., Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 2024.
  • WHO scientific brief (2 March 2022): the global prevalence of anxiety and depression "increased by a massive 25%" during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, and "women have been more severely impacted than men." Source: WHO, "Mental health and COVID-19: early evidence of the pandemic's impact," 2022.
  • IHME Global Burden of Disease 2021: anxiety disorders account for 63.1% of all mental health disorder cases globally (359.2 million cases). +50% absolute case growth since 1990. A +19.21% pandemic spike (+76.2 million cases) in 2020. Women higher in every age band. High-SDI age-standardised rate rose from 658.87 to 841.56 per 100,000. Source: IHME, Global Burden of Disease 2021.
  • OECD Health at a Glance 2023: anxiety symptom share doubled during COVID and remains at least 20% above pre-pandemic levels in every OECD country with data. Source: OECD, Health at a Glance 2023.
  • Eurostat - European Health Interview Survey (EHIS), Wave 3, 2019: across the EU-27, 8.7% of women aged 15+ reported chronic depression versus 5.5% of men - a higher rate for women in every EU member state. Source: Eurostat, EHIS Wave 3, published 10 September 2021.
  • headspace Australia (2025): 53% of young Australian women report high or very high psychological distress; women aged 18 to 29 recorded the steepest increase in mentally unhealthy days of any demographic between 2018 and 2025. Source: headspace National Youth Mental Health Survey, 2025.
  • Lancet Psychiatry Commission on Women's Mental Health (March 2026): women globally are 1.5 to 2× more likely than men to experience anxiety or depression. 1 in 4 women will face a mental disorder in her lifetime. Source: The Lancet Psychiatry, 2026 Commission on Women's Mental Health.

The Sydney practice's female anxiety rate (25.8% in 2025) sits within the range that international population-level surveys have been reporting for women's anxiety and depression in the post-2020 period. The shape of the change - anxiety displacing another long-standing top category as the leading reason for presentation - has already been documented in a peer-reviewed national-scale Australian counselling dataset (Rickwood 2023, n=58,233 at headspace), and in regional UK youth counselling data (Mind 2024). The Sydney case-study finding does not establish a global trend on its own; it documents one clinical-level view of a shift that population data, peer-reviewed counselling-service data, and large clinician surveys are all picking up.

What changed isn't that women suddenly became more anxious in 2020. What changed is that anxiety became the reason they walked through the door, ahead of the relationship presenting issues that had topped the list for the previous decade. Dan Auerbach - Clinical Director, ACPS

Shift 2: Women's work stress has surpassed men's for the first time in 15 years of clinical data

Throughout the 2010s, men in this practice consistently presented with work stress at higher rates than women. In 2025, that pattern reversed: 12.2% of female clients cited work stress as their primary issue, against 8.6% of male clients. Aggregate work stress also reached its highest recorded level in the dataset, at 13.9%.

Work stress in 2025 - female vs male clients

In 2025 female clients (12.2%) presented with work stress as a primary issue at a higher rate than male clients (8.6%). Source: ACPS internal client intake records.

Aggregate work stress rate - annual % of all clients

Aggregate work stress has risen every year since 2015. The 2025 rate of 13.9% is the highest in the 15-year dataset.

How this aligns with international data

International workplace surveys also show women reporting higher daily stress and burnout than men

Several international workplace data sources are now showing the same gendered pattern that the Sydney clinical data is picking up - though the surveys vary in methodology and definitions. US workforce surveys are reporting the same female-skewed pattern, alongside UK and global data:

  • Mental Health America, "Mind the Workplace 2024": a higher share of female employees and employees under 50 reported feelings of burnout in the past year than other groups. 76% of US employees agreed that work stress affects the amount or quality of their sleep. Source: Mental Health America, Mind the Workplace 2024 (7th annual report), based on ~4,000 US employees across 21 industries.
  • Gallup, State of the Global Workplace 2025: approximately 40% of employees globally report feeling stress "a lot of the day," and Gallup explicitly notes that women report "consistently higher worry and stress" than men. Source: Gallup, State of the Global Workplace 2025.
  • UK Health and Safety Executive (HSE), 2024/25: 964,000 workers reported work-related stress, depression or anxiety - a rate of 2,770 per 100,000 workers. Stress, depression and anxiety accounted for 22.1 million working days lost in 2024/25, the largest single category of work-related ill health. Source: HSE, "Work-related stress, depression or anxiety statistics in Great Britain, 2024/25."

The Sydney finding - that female clients have for the first time overtaken male clients on work stress as a primary presenting issue - is consistent with what large international workplace surveys are now reporting for women's daily stress and burnout. Whether the Sydney clinical signal is leading or trailing those surveys is not a claim this dataset can support.

For most of the dataset, work stress was something men brought to the consulting room more than women. That's no longer true. The 2025 reversal in the Sydney data is in the same direction as the gender gap that Gallup, HSE and Mental Health America are picking up at workforce level. Dan Auerbach - Clinical Director, ACPS

Shift 3: Burnout has grown nearly five-fold as a share of clients - from 0.6% in 2011 to 2.8% in 2025

Burnout was barely a presenting category in this practice in 2011, when 6 of 982 unique clients (0.6%) cited it at intake. By 2025, 69 of 2,427 unique clients (2.8%) did - a roughly five-fold rise as a share of presentations after accounting for the practice's own growth, or an 11-fold rise in raw case count. The growth is most pronounced among female clients aged 25–44, and the steepest single-year jump is from 2020 to 2021.

Burnout presentations - share of unique clients per year, 2011–2025

Burnout grew from 0.6% of unique clients (6 of 982) in 2011 to 2.8% (69 of 2,427) in 2025 - a roughly five-fold rise as a share of clients. Plotted as percentage of unique clients per year to control for the practice growing from ~1,000 clients per year in 2011 to ~2,500 per year by 2025. Raw case count rose 11-fold (6 → 69) over the same period; both figures are accurate, but the rate-based figure is the one that controls for practice size. Growth is most pronounced among female clients aged 25–44. Source: ACPS internal client intake records.

How this aligns with international data

The five-fold rate increase tracks with the formal recognition of burnout as a clinical category and with international workforce surveys

  • WHO, ICD-11 (announced 28 May 2019; ICD-11 effective 1 January 2022): burn-out was added to the International Classification of Diseases as an "occupational phenomenon," not a medical condition, and defined as "a syndrome conceptualized as resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed," characterised by "feelings of energy depletion or exhaustion; increased mental distance from one's job, or feelings of negativism or cynicism related to one's job; and reduced professional efficacy." This is the structural moment that made burn-out diagnostically visible in clinical settings worldwide. Source: WHO, "Burn-out an 'occupational phenomenon': ICD-11."
  • McKinsey Health Institute (multi-country employee survey): more than one in five employees globally report burnout symptoms. The 2023 cross-country survey found India highest at 59% and Switzerland lowest at 22%. McKinsey's 2024 Women in the Workplace report (with LeanIn.Org) found 43% of women in senior leadership reported burnout, versus 31% of male peers. Source: McKinsey Health Institute and McKinsey/LeanIn.Org Women in the Workplace 2024.
  • Gallup, State of the Global Workplace 2025: 31% of women report feeling burnout "very often" or "always" at work, versus 23% of men. Among women in leadership roles, the average from 2022 to 2025 was 29% reporting burnout, versus 19% of men in the same roles. Source: Gallup, State of the Global Workplace 2025; Gallup, "Women Show Stronger Employee Engagement Amid Higher Burnout."

Two structural factors plausibly contribute to the rate at which burnout now appears in the Sydney intake data: WHO's 2019 formal recognition of burn-out (which made it a category clinicians and clients alike could use), and the post-2020 elevation in workforce exhaustion documented by McKinsey, Gallup and others. The Sydney rise - 0.6% to 2.8% as a share of clients, or 6 to 69 in raw count - is consistent with both of these structural shifts. It is not, on its own, evidence of either.

Shift 4: Men sought help for suicidal ideation at almost the same rate as women - while dying by suicide at 3.2× the rate nationally

Safe-messaging note. This section discusses suicide statistics for clinical and research purposes. It does not describe methods, locations, or any specific deaths. It follows Australian Mindframe, UK Samaritans media guidelines, and the WHO resource Preventing Suicide: A Resource for Media Professionals. If you or someone you know is struggling, please contact Lifeline 13 11 14 (Australia), Samaritans 116 123 (UK / ROI), or 988 (US Suicide & Crisis Lifeline). International directory: findahelpline.com.

The most internationally portable finding in this dataset concerns the male suicide help-seeking gap. The pattern - men dying by suicide at multiples of the female rate, while seeking professional help at similar or lower rates than women - is documented globally. The Sydney data offers a clinical-level view of that gap: across fifteen years of intake records, men and women in this practice presented for help with suicidal ideation at almost identical rates, while national mortality data shows men dying by suicide at 3.2× the female rate.

Help-seeking - this practice (2011–2025)

Suicidal-ideation presentations - male clients 0.84%
Suicidal-ideation presentations - female clients 0.82%
Self-harm - male clients 0.24%
Self-harm - female clients 0.41%

Suicidal-ideation presentations are near-equal across the 15-year window (90 male, 84 female). Self-harm skews female. These figures likely under-capture ideation: many clients present primarily with depression, anxiety or relationship issues and disclose ideation later. Source: ACPS internal client intake records, 2011–2025.

National deaths by suicide - Australia (ABS, 2024)

Male suicide rate (per 100,000) 18.7
Female suicide rate (per 100,000) 5.9
Male share of all suicide deaths 76.5%
Total deaths by suicide (2024, preliminary) 3,307

Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Causes of Death, Australia 2024 (preliminary). Men in Australia die by suicide at 3.2× the female rate. The highest-rate demographic is men aged 55–64 at 30.9 per 100,000.

How this aligns with international data

The male suicide gap is a global pattern, not an Australian one

  • WHO, "Suicide worldwide in 2021: global health estimates" (published 2025): 727,000 deaths globally in 2021. Global age-standardised suicide rate of 8.9 per 100,000. The age-standardised male rate was 2.2× the female rate globally - and 3.2× in high-income countries (the same multiple seen in Australia). 56% of global suicides occurred before age 50; 73% occurred in low- and middle-income countries. Source: WHO, "Suicide worldwide in 2021: global health estimates."
  • Samaritans (UK), latest annual statistics (2024 data, England, Wales, Scotland): in England, the male suicide rate was 17.1 per 100,000 versus a female rate of 5.6 (a ratio of 3.05×). In Wales, the male rate was 25.0 versus a female rate of 6.8 (3.68×). The highest-risk male age group in England was 50–54 at 26.8 per 100,000; in Wales, men aged 45–49 at 41.2 per 100,000. Source: Samaritans, "Latest suicide data."
  • Movember Foundation: approximately 60 men globally are lost to suicide every hour - around 525,600 men per year. Source: Movember Foundation.

The 3.2× male:female national mortality ratio observed in Australia in 2024 is the same ratio that WHO reports for high-income countries as a group, and it is consistent with the 3.0–3.7× range observed in the UK home nations. This is the structural pattern the Sydney data is documenting from the consulting-room side: men in this practice present for suicidal-ideation help at the same rate as women, while national mortality data shows them dying at three times the rate.

The clinical reading. The Sydney practice cannot, on its own, explain the global male suicide help-seeking gap. What this dataset offers is a fifteen-year, clinical-level demonstration of the gap's existence: equal help-seeking presentations in the consulting room, alongside a 3.2× male death rate in the national mortality data. International evidence - WHO, Samaritans, Movember - points in the same direction. The structural question of why men at highest mortality risk (in Australia, men aged 55–64 at 30.9 per 100,000) remain under-represented in counselling attendance is not answered by this dataset; it is one this dataset highlights.

How male and female clients in this practice present differently

Gender was inferred from client first names using the gender-guesser library (see Methodology). Of 36,309 clients in the dataset: 11,608 male (32%), 11,026 female (30%), 10,944 couple sessions (30%), with the remaining ~8% unable to be classified by name. The differences in presenting issues are clinically significant and are largely consistent with gender differences documented in international population-level data.

Anxiety - women's #1, men's #2 25.8% vs 18.1%

Anxiety is the leading primary issue for female clients (25.8%) and the second-ranking issue for male clients (18.1%, after relationship issues). The 7.7-percentage-point gender gap is consistent with Eurostat 2019 (8.7% women vs 5.5% men reporting chronic depression).

Work stress - women now higher 12.2% vs 8.6%

Female clients (12.2%) now present with work stress at a higher rate than male clients (8.6%) - a reversal from earlier years in the dataset. Aligns with Gallup 2025 finding that women report higher daily stress and burnout than men globally.

Anger management - male:female 3.0×

16.6% of male clients vs 5.5% of female clients present with anger management as a primary issue. One of the largest gender gaps in the dataset.

All addiction types combined M 18.5% / F 5.1%

Combined addiction presentations (substance, behavioural, gambling, pornography) affect approximately 1 in 5 male clients versus 1 in 20 female clients - a 3.6× gap. Consistent with international epidemiological evidence of higher male prevalence across most addiction categories.

Key gender differences - % of clients within gender (male vs female)

Source: ACPS internal client intake records, 2011–2025. All addiction types grouped into "All Addiction." Couples and unclassified clients excluded from this chart.

How this data was collected, how it was analysed, and what it cannot tell you

This is a longitudinal case study from one private practice. Read the methodology before lifting figures: every quantitative claim in this report carries a methodological caveat, and the case-study framing is what makes the findings defensible.

Data source.
Internal client intake records from Associated Counsellors & Psychologists Sydney, a multi-location private counselling and psychology practice. Records span May 2011 to December 2025. Dataset: 36,309 clients, 139,687 total appointments. Presenting issues were captured from client intake notes and classified by AI-assisted text analysis into approximately 50 categories. A single client may have more than one presenting issue recorded.
Gender classification.
Client gender was inferred from first names using the open-source gender-guesser Python library. Couple sessions were classified as "Couple." Accuracy is approximately 85–90% for common English-language first names; lower for names common across multiple genders or for non-English-language names. Approximately 8% of clients could not be confidently classified and are excluded from gender-disaggregated figures.
What this dataset is not.
It is not a random population sample. It is not a national or global mental-health study. It is not the world's largest dataset of its kind, and no claim of that nature is made anywhere in this report. It captures the people who sought, and could afford, private counselling at one Sydney practice over fifteen years.
Selection bias.
The dataset over-represents people who could pay for private counselling and under-represents people in lower-affluence Sydney suburbs and people without disposable income for therapy. It also over-represents English-speaking clients and people in inner-Sydney catchments where the practice has clinics. Findings should be read as patterns within this clientele, not as Sydney population estimates.
Practice-growth confound, and how this report addresses it.
The practice's unique-client base grew from 982 in 2011 to 2,427 in 2025 (a 2.4× increase). Raw-count growth in any one presenting issue therefore reflects both the rise of the issue and the rise of the practice. Where this report quotes raw counts (e.g. "6 burnout clients in 2011, 69 in 2025") we also quote the corresponding rate (0.6% → 2.8% of unique clients), which controls for practice growth. Headline figures and section claims lead with the rate; raw counts are shown as supporting detail. Where a metric is reported as a raw count only, treat it as directional rather than absolute.
International cross-references.
The international data cited in this report (WHO, OECD, Eurostat, UK HSE, Gallup, McKinsey, Samaritans, Movember, headspace, ABS, AIHW, NHS England, BACP, Mind, APA, CDC, NIMH, KFF, IHME, Slade et al. 2024, Rickwood et al. 2023, the Lancet Psychiatry Commission on Women's Mental Health 2026, and others listed in the References below) is not equivalent to this practice's data: methodologies, sampling frames, definitions and time windows all differ. The cross-references are presented to show directional alignment between the Sydney case-study finding and broader international evidence - not to claim like-for-like comparison. Two sources are particularly load-bearing for the anxiety claim: Rickwood et al. 2023 (PLOS ONE), which documented anxiety overtaking another presenting issue at the same primary-presenting-issue level of analysis on n=58,233 first-presenting youth at headspace nationally; and NHS Talking Therapies, which provides 11 consecutive years of presenting-problem time-series at approximately 1.8 million referrals per year in 2024–25. Exact figures, sample sizes and time windows are sourced and dated in the references list below.

References

  1. World Health Organization. "Mental health and COVID-19: early evidence of the pandemic's impact." Scientific brief, 2 March 2022. who.int
  2. World Health Organization. "World mental health report: Transforming mental health for all." 16 June 2022. who.int
  3. World Health Organization. "Suicide worldwide in 2021: global health estimates." 2025. who.int
  4. World Health Organization. "Burn-out an 'occupational phenomenon': International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11)." 28 May 2019; ICD-11 effective 1 January 2022. who.int
  5. Eurostat. "7.2% of people in the EU suffer from chronic depression." European Health Interview Survey (EHIS) Wave 3 (2019), published 10 September 2021. ec.europa.eu/eurostat
  6. Gallup. "State of the Global Workplace 2025." 2025. gallup.com
  7. Gallup. "Women Show Stronger Employee Engagement Amid Higher Burnout." 2025. gallup.com
  8. UK Health and Safety Executive. "Work-related stress, depression or anxiety statistics in Great Britain, 2024/25." Published November 2025. hse.gov.uk
  9. Mental Health America. "Mind the Workplace 2024: 7th annual report." 2024. mhanational.org
  10. McKinsey Health Institute. Cross-country employee burnout survey, 2023; "Addressing employee burnout." mckinsey.com
  11. McKinsey & Company / LeanIn.Org. "Women in the Workplace 2024." 2024.
  12. Samaritans. "Latest suicide data" (England, Wales, Scotland - 2024 data; Northern Ireland 2023; Republic of Ireland 2022). samaritans.org
  13. Movember Foundation. Foundation page on men's mental health. au.movember.com
  14. headspace Australia. National Youth Mental Health Survey, 2025. headspace.org.au
  15. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Causes of Death, Australia, 2024 (preliminary). abs.gov.au
  16. Mindframe Australia. Reporting guidelines on suicide and mental ill-health. mindframe.org.au
  17. Samaritans. Media guidelines for reporting suicide. samaritans.org
  18. World Health Organization. "Preventing suicide: A resource for media professionals." Updated 2023. who.int
  19. Additional national and international counselling-service / clinician-survey sources (added for the international-evidence edition)
  20. Rickwood D., Mazzer K., Telford N., et al. "Symptoms presented by adolescents and young adults at first contact with headspace centres." PLOS ONE, 2023. n=58,233 first-presenting youth aged 12–25 at headspace Australia centres. journals.plos.org
  21. Slade T., Chapman C., Sunderland M., et al. Peer-reviewed analysis of the ABS National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing 2020–22. Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 2024. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
  22. Australian Bureau of Statistics. National Study of Mental Health and Wellbeing 2020–22 (n=15,893 households). abs.gov.au
  23. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Mental health services in Australia - prevalence and impact of mental illness; Medicare Better Access service-use data. aihw.gov.au
  24. Relationships Australia. Relationship Indicators 2024 (n=3,004). relationships.org.au
  25. Lifeline Australia. Annual Report FY2023–24. lifeline.org.au
  26. NHS Digital / NHS England. NHS Talking Therapies for Anxiety and Depression: Annual Reports 2014–15 through 2024–25 (11 consecutive years; ~1.8 million referrals in 2024–25). digital.nhs.uk
  27. British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP). Mindometer 2023 and Mindometer 2025: UK counsellor membership survey on presenting-issue trends. bacp.co.uk
  28. Mind. The Big Mental Health Report 2024 (includes Welsh youth counselling presenting-issue data 2015–16 to 2022–23). mind.org.uk
  29. American Psychological Association. 2023 Practitioner Pulse Survey (n=561 US psychologists). apa.org
  30. US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Household Pulse Survey: anxiety and depression symptoms, April 2020 to September 2024 (16,795 data points). cdc.gov
  31. KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). Women's Health Survey and KFF / NHIS analyses on mental-health treatment use, 2019–2022. kff.org
  32. US National Institute of Mental Health. Any Anxiety Disorder prevalence statistics (US adults). nimh.nih.gov
  33. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). 2023 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH). samhsa.gov
  34. American Psychological Association. Stress in America 2023 (n=3,185). apa.org
  35. Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). Global Burden of Disease 2021 - anxiety disorders. healthdata.org
  36. OECD. Health at a Glance 2023 - mental health chapter. oecd.org
  37. World Health Organization. Mental Health Atlas (2020 and 2024 editions). who.int
  38. The Lancet Psychiatry Commission on Women's Mental Health. March 2026 Commission report. thelancet.com

All presenting issues - 2011 to 2025

The full table below is provided as a research resource for journalists who want to cite issue-level rates that are not addressed in the four headline shifts. A client may have more than one presenting issue recorded at intake, so percentages do not sum to 100. Source: ACPS internal client intake records, n = 36,309 clients across 2011–2025.

#Presenting issue% of all clientsNotes
1Relationship issues26.4%Top issue overall; #1 for male clients
2Anxiety22.2%#1 for female clients (25.8%); see Section 02
3Depression17.4%Higher for female clients
4Work stress13.9%2025 aggregate rate, all-time high; see Section 03
5Anger management11.5%3× more common in male clients (16.6% vs 5.5%)
6Family conflict9.7%
7Grief / bereavement8.5%
8Trauma / PTSD7.8%
9Self-esteem / identity7.4%
10Parenting7.0%
11Stress (general, non-work)6.2%
12Communication issues5.9%
13Couples therapy (general)5.6%
14Sleep issues4.7%
15Workplace bullying / conflict4.2%
16Pornography use3.6%97%+ male clients
17Substance use (alcohol, drugs)3.4%Higher for male clients
18Sexual issues3.2%
19Burnout2.9%~5-fold growth as a share of clients (0.6% to 2.8%); 11-fold in raw count. See Section 04.
20OCD / obsessive thoughts2.5%
21Eating issues2.1%Higher for female clients
22Gambling1.7%Higher for male clients
23Phobias1.5%
24Suicidal ideation0.83%Near-equal across genders; see Section 05
25Self-harm0.32%Higher for female clients

Categories with fewer than ~50 client presentations across the 15-year window are excluded from this summary. Underlying data and additional category breakdowns available on request via press@primespotpr.com.