Your grandfather walked twelve kilometres to school in the rain. Your mother got married at twenty without a panic attack. Your uncle worked sixteen-hour shifts and never once thought about therapy. So why, the relatives ask, are you the one who cannot handle anything? Why does this generation cry so much, complain so much, need so much? Why has every young person around you started seeing a counsellor?
Here is the answer the older generation does not want to hear. Gen Z is not weak. Gen Z is the most surveilled, most compared, most algorithmically manipulated, and most informationally overwhelmed generation in human history. The data is clear. Anxiety disorders, depression, and self-harm rates among young people have risen sharply across the world over the last decade. At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, we see this every day in our outpatient department, and we want to explain what is actually happening — because misunderstanding it is making it worse.
The American Psychological Association's annual Stress in America report, one of the most respected national mental health surveys in the world, has consistently documented that Gen Z reports the highest stress levels of any adult generation. The World Health Organization confirms that globally, depression and anxiety are now the leading causes of illness and disability among adolescents. UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, in its State of the World's Children Report, warns that one in seven children and adolescents worldwide is now living with a diagnosed mental disorder. These are not opinions. They are international, peer-reviewed numbers.
Indian data follows the same trend. Surveys by the Indian Council of Medical Research and the National Mental Health Survey of India have documented rising rates of anxiety and depression among young people, particularly in urban areas. The youth of every previous generation faced hardship. Gen Z faces a different kind — a more pervasive, more inescapable, more measurable kind.
Start with the phone. Every previous generation finished the day and went home. The school bully stayed at school. The office stayed at the office. The neighbour's gossip stayed in the neighbourhood. For Gen Z, none of this is true. The school bully is on Instagram at midnight. The office is on Slack on Sunday. The gossip is in a WhatsApp group of three hundred people. There is no off switch. The nervous system was not designed for this.
Add comparison. Previous generations compared themselves to neighbours and cousins. Gen Z compares itself to the most beautiful, the richest, the most successful version of every stranger on earth — twenty-four hours a day, in highly edited form. Add climate dread, economic precarity, an unstable job market, the collapse of traditional life paths, two years of pandemic isolation during their formative years, and exposure to global suffering on a scale no previous generation could even see. Calling this generation anxious is correct. Calling it weak for being anxious is biologically illiterate.
Older generations often present with the classic symptoms of anxiety — racing heart, sweating, panic attacks, fear of going out. Gen Z anxiety looks different. It looks like a permanent low hum of dread that does not have a single trigger. It looks like an inability to make decisions, even small ones. It looks like sleep disturbance, screen dependence, and a flat, exhausted relationship with the future. Many young patients describe feeling old at twenty. Tired before they have lived. Disconnected from a future that does not feel like it belongs to them.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists are trained to recognise this presentation. Standard anxiety screening alone is often not enough — we look for the specific markers of generational and digital stress, screen patterns, sleep architecture, social comparison habits, and underlying mood symptoms. The treatment combines evidence-based therapies like Cognitive Behavioural Therapy with, where needed, medication for the most disabling symptoms.
What does not help is being told to be grateful, to think of starving children, to log off and go for a walk, or to get over it. None of these instructions address the underlying neurobiology, and most of them deepen the shame the young person already feels. What does help is being properly assessed by a qualified clinician, learning the actual mechanics of how your nervous system is reacting to the modern world, and acquiring concrete cognitive and behavioural tools. Many patients also benefit from medication, either short-term or longer, depending on severity. Healing is real and measurable. We see it every month.
Q: Is anxiety in young people really increasing or are they just talking about it more?
A: Both. Awareness has improved, but international data confirms a real increase.
Q: Can therapy alone fix anxiety?
A: For mild and moderate cases, often yes. Severe cases usually need medication too.
Q: Will medication change my child's personality?
A: No. Properly prescribed medication restores function. It does not replace personality.
Q: Is anxiety hereditary?
A: There is a genetic component, but environment and behaviour matter just as much.
Q: When should we bring our teenager in?
A: When sleep, school, mood, or relationships have been affected for more than two weeks.
Gen Z is not weak. Gen Z is fighting battles older generations never had to face. Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad offers compassionate, evidence-based care for young people. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.