Do i have depression quiz for kids


SAMHSA’s National Helpline | SAMHSA

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  • SAMHSA’s National Helpline is a free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service (in English and Spanish) for individuals and families facing mental and/or substance use disorders.

    Also visit the online treatment locator.

SAMHSA’s National Helpline, 1-800-662-HELP (4357) (also known as the Treatment Referral Routing Service), or TTY: 1-800-487-4889 is a confidential, free, 24-hour-a-day, 365-day-a-year, information service, in English and Spanish, for individuals and family members facing mental and/or substance use disorders. This service provides referrals to local treatment facilities, support groups, and community-based organizations.

Also visit the online treatment locator, or send your zip code via text message: 435748 (HELP4U) to find help near you. Read more about the HELP4U text messaging service.

The service is open 24/7, 365 days a year.

English and Spanish are available if you select the option to speak with a national representative. Currently, the 435748 (HELP4U) text messaging service is only available in English.

In 2020, the Helpline received 833,598 calls. This is a 27 percent increase from 2019, when the Helpline received a total of 656,953 calls for the year.

The referral service is free of charge. If you have no insurance or are underinsured, we will refer you to your state office, which is responsible for state-funded treatment programs. In addition, we can often refer you to facilities that charge on a sliding fee scale or accept Medicare or Medicaid. If you have health insurance, you are encouraged to contact your insurer for a list of participating health care providers and facilities.

The service is confidential. We will not ask you for any personal information. We may ask for your zip code or other pertinent geographic information in order to track calls being routed to other offices or to accurately identify the local resources appropriate to your needs.

No, we do not provide counseling. Trained information specialists answer calls, transfer callers to state services or other appropriate intake centers in their states, and connect them with local assistance and support.

  • Suggested Resources

    What Is Substance Abuse Treatment? A Booklet for Families
    Created for family members of people with alcohol abuse or drug abuse problems. Answers questions about substance abuse, its symptoms, different types of treatment, and recovery. Addresses concerns of children of parents with substance use/abuse problems.

    It's Not Your Fault (NACoA) (PDF | 12 KB)
    Assures teens with parents who abuse alcohol or drugs that, "It's not your fault!" and that they are not alone. Encourages teens to seek emotional support from other adults, school counselors, and youth support groups such as Alateen, and provides a resource list.

    After an Attempt: A Guide for Taking Care of Your Family Member After Treatment in the Emergency Department
    Aids family members in coping with the aftermath of a relative's suicide attempt. Describes the emergency department treatment process, lists questions to ask about follow-up treatment, and describes how to reduce risk and ensure safety at home.

    Family Therapy Can Help: For People in Recovery From Mental Illness or Addiction
    Explores the role of family therapy in recovery from mental illness or substance abuse. Explains how family therapy sessions are run and who conducts them, describes a typical session, and provides information on its effectiveness in recovery.

    For additional resources, please visit the SAMHSA Store.

Last Updated: 08/30/2022

SAMHSA Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator

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Welcome to the Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator, a confidential and anonymous source of information for persons seeking treatment facilities in the United States or U.S. Territories for substance use/addiction and/or mental health problems.

PLEASE NOTE: Your personal information and the search criteria you enter into the Locator is secure and anonymous. SAMHSA does not collect or maintain any information you provide.

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The Locator is authorized by the 21st Century Cures Act (Public Law 114-255, Section 9006; 42 U.S.C. 290bb-36d). SAMHSA endeavors to keep the Locator current. All information in the Locator is updated annually from facility responses to SAMHSA’s National Substance Use and Mental Health Services Survey (N-SUMHSS). New facilities that have completed an abbreviated survey and met all the qualifications are added monthly. Updates to facility names, addresses, telephone numbers, and services are made weekly for facilities informing SAMHSA of changes. Facilities may request additions or changes to their information by sending an e-mail to [email protected], by calling the BHSIS Project Office at 1-833-888-1553 (Mon-Fri 8-6 ET), or by electronic form submission using the Locator online application form (intended for additions of new facilities).

Depression test

  • Sometimes I feel very sad:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I feel hopeless when I think about the future:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I feel like a complete failure:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I do not get pleasure and joy from what I do:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • Most of the time I feel guilty about something:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Definitely disagree

  • I seem to be constantly accused of something:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I feel disappointed (even disgusted) with myself:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • The bad things in my life are all my fault:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I often feel like crying:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I often feel irritated and upset:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Definitely disagree

  • I am not interested in other people's lives and do not like to listen to them:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I find it difficult to make decisions:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I think I am ugly or ugly:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • It is very difficult for me to do anything, especially to work:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • My sleep pattern is disturbed:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I'm so tired that I can't do anything:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • My appetite has changed a lot:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I lost a lot of weight:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I am not concerned about physical health:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I am not interested in sexual relations at all:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • I thought to take my own life:

    Definitely agree

    Likely agree

    Most likely disagree

    Strongly disagree

  • Test.

    Are you depressed or just in a bad mood?

    StoriesTests

    Attention. If you came here just for the test, then you will find it below. But first, let's talk a little about what depression is.

    At all times, there have been illnesses with beautiful names, which were not so prestigious to get sick - rather, it was fashionable to say that you have them, or to replace them with real ailments. It was worth saying “monstrous influenza” instead of “terrible snot” - and those around you immediately imbued with respect for you and your fine organization.

    Today, depression has become such a disease that everyone talks about, often without understanding the original meaning of the name. It is customary to write off everything on it: impotence, wrecked jobs and unwillingness to go to the evening of the reunion of graduates. At the same time, few people know that depression is a very specific ailment caused by such complex biochemical changes in the nervous system that an ordinary person cannot cause them even for money. It is actually quite difficult to catch depression, and what is considered to be it is, as a rule, a depressive personality accentuation, a bad mood, or even ordinary hatred of people.

    Do you want to know the whole truth about whether you have depression? You have two scenarios to choose from: either you go to a psychoanalyst, and he gives you a clinical test that diagnoses depression with a 100% guarantee; or you are taking the same clinical test that we took as a keepsake when we ourselves went to be tested.

    Yes, and keep in mind that the causes of depression are usually very specific: long-term mental stress, overwork, chronic brain injury, severe and long-term diseases of internal organs, surgical operations, lack of blood supply to the brain and congenital neurochemical disorders. If you don’t have and never had any of the above, it means that you probably don’t need any tests here. Just stop faking depression and it will pass!

    What depression is like

    According to the international classification of diseases "ICD-10", depression is not even one disease, but seven different ones. In the sense that it is divided into groups.

    Due to the occurrence of

    Neurotic D., caused by an internal conflict.
    Reactive D., which is a reaction to mental trauma.
    Endogenous D., which is generally easy to treat because it has neurochemical causes.

    By the nature of the flow

    Classic D.
    Concealed D.

    Gravity

    Small D.
    Large D.

    Of course, these types can be combined. For example, major depression can be both classic and reactive. But that's not all. For MAXIM readers only! Having caught a hidden depression, you get two more varieties of the disease as a gift!

    Jokes aside. Latent depression can be somatized (this is when, in addition to a bad mood, you are tormented by some kind of bodily ailment like stomach disease or dystonia) or masked. In this case, you will have all the symptoms of another disease - for example, appendicitis. However, an autopsy will show you didn't have it.

    What ailments does depression like to disguise itself as? Of course, all the fault and the truth may be an expired mold on the cheese. However, depression often uses these symptoms to set doctors on the wrong track.

    The condition of the stomach worsens in the morning, and by the afternoon you start picking the contents of the plate again with a sad look, feeling relieved. Patients are admitted to hospitals with suspected acute appendicitis and cholecystitis, but the intervention of surgeons does not bring relief.

    2. Headache

    A person cannot say exactly where it hurts. More often the pain appears to him in the form of iron hoops squeezing the skull, or something that crawls inside the head. The condition, as in the case of the abdomen, worsens in the morning, and by the evening passes. Such patients are diagnosed with "migraine" or "vegetovascular dystonia", and then they drink useless painkillers for years.

    3. Facial pain

    Cunning depression mimics trigeminal neuralgia (it runs from the ear to the eyebrow and lower jaw) and inflammation of the temporomandibular joint. Desperate patients ask dentists to extract perfectly healthy teeth, which sometimes, by the way, brings temporary relief. The mask of depression also causes a surprisingly vivid sensation of roughness and hairiness of the tongue.

    4. Cardialgia

    Imitation of interruptions in the work of the heart, burning or cold behind the sternum. The results of the cardiogram do not correspond to the patient's complaints, but out of pity, the doctors prescribe heart medications for him. They reduce pain, but do not remove it completely.

    5. Arthralgia

    You think you have sciatica, joint diseases and neuralgia. But the doctors, after looking at your x-ray, twist their fingers to the temple. At the same time, your joints hurt not where they should, but a few centimeters higher.

    6. Insomnia

    Depression without sleep disorders is like Fedor Konyukhov without legs. Moreover, sometimes insomnia may be the only symptom of masked depression. In this case, you will wake up unrested, have breakfast with an aversion to food, and then come to work already tired and immediately fall for a cigarette or a cup of coffee. Peaks of activity are possible, but usually they occur at 10-12 in the morning, and at that time you are still sleeping, because in the evening, despite being tired, you could not fall asleep and tossed and turned all night. And so every day.

    By the way, read: How to understand your dream: the meaning of the five most frequent dreams from the point of view of psychologists.

    7. Phobias

    You understand that sharks don't live in soup, and aliens don't want to kill you. But this does not help to overcome baseless fear. However, exotic phobias of depression are rare. More often it causes fear of death from cessation of breathing, panic attacks. The phobia usually gets worse at night and in the morning.

    8. Sexual disorders

    Weakening of erection? Accelerated or, conversely, delayed ejaculation? Do not rush to bequeath your penis to science. Maybe it's the depression again. By the way, the famous "demon in the ribs" (and in scientific terms, the desire for ever stronger sexual stimuli) is also a sign of depression, and usually the earliest.

    9. Drug addiction and alcoholism

    Indulgence in bad habits brings short-term relief. Hangovers or withdrawals are accompanied by terribly violent symptoms taken from the previous eight points.

    Clinical Depression Test

    Manual. There are 44 groups of statements in front of you. In each of them, choose one answer that best describes how you feel. Remember, your task is not to win, but to find out the truth. Answer sincerely. To make it easier for you to do this, we didn’t even obsessively “make fun” of the answers, as we usually do.

    I am no more depressed (sad) than usual.

    I'm probably more depressed (sad) than usual

    Yes, I am more depressed (sad) than usual.

    I am much more depressed (sad) than usual.

    How to deal with depression

    This part will be of interest primarily to people who have scored serious amounts in the test. If you do not have depression, according to the results, you can read this block with detached gloating. So, an independent way out of a sad state can take months and even years, and even then, provided that you protect yourself from stress - preferably with a monastery wall or a grove of palm trees.

    It's easier to see a doctor, because depression is curable. In fact, it is a failure in metabolism. Doctors will treat you not only with pills, but also with heart-to-heart conversations (the most unpleasant part). Without the simultaneous elimination of physiological and psychological factors, a person cannot be cured.

    Your best friend for the next six months should be a psychotherapist. Experienced mental trauma, mental stress, quarrels with others and internal conflicts, severe worries about one's own health - all this can underlie depression. Treatment with only powerful pills (without psychotherapy), of course, helps, but after the drug is discontinued, the disease may visit you again.

    By the way, read: Am I normal? 31 questions about yourself that you would be embarrassed to ask a psychologist.

    What will they give you? Alas, in some cases, drugs are indispensable: a neglected disease destroys the brain so much that the balance of neurotransmitters does not restore itself.

    Antidepressants

    The foundation of any course of treatment. Side effects and doses may vary, but the purpose of the drugs is the same - to eliminate the biochemical basis of depression.

    Vitamins and biostimulants

    And these useful pills will help you supply your brain cells with energy and other useful little things. Actually, these are not some secret substances, but the same vitamins that healthy people drink to increase stress resistance and immunity.

    Tranquilizers

    By themselves, these powerful drugs do not cure depression. But they struggle with its symptoms (and sometimes even succeed in this): longing, fear, bodily manifestations. Antidepressants do not give an immediate effect, therefore, to make it more fun for you to wait for it, the doctor will probably prescribe “trunks” for you.

    Antipsychotics

    In fact, these are ordinary sedatives, but they are so strong that they can calm even an elephant that has just lost all its relatives, both tusks and a share in the business. Antipsychotics reduce arousal and eliminate fears, bring the patient out of a mental impasse and reduce the bodily manifestations of masked depression.

    However, neuroleptics may not be the case. Doctors usually start the course with a cocktail of antidepressants and biostimulants. And only if it didn’t work, two other components are added.

    Why it might not work

    Pills are almost useless unless the therapist has addressed the personal causes of depression—for example, forced you to quit.

    You have untreated thyroid disease, diabetes, hypertension, and other conditions that cause depression.

    You interrupted the course too soon, delighted with the improvement. If you stop taking antidepressants before a stable effect appears, depression will develop again.


    Learn more