The Great British
Depression & Treatment Map

How is your city actually coping?

Help us build the UK's first real-time map of depression levels and the actual treatments people use to cope. Enter your postcode to represent your area.

AnonymousTakes 3 minEvidence-based

After the study concludes, you will receive the complete report with all findings directly to your email.

Why This Study Matters

States of Mind is launching an independent, 14-day data snapshot to build the UK's first Real-Time Depression Map, focusing on depression levels and progressive treatments that help people to cope with that, region by region.

Clinical Standards

We use evidence-based screening models (PHQ-9 for depression and GAD-7 for anxiety) to ensure every data point is medically valid.

The Progressive Layer

Unlike government reports, we track the adoption of Alternative & Progressive Therapies (including Somatic and professionally supervised Psychedelic integration). We map where active engagement with these methods exposes a massive gap in the traditional healthcare supply.

Safety First

This study focuses strictly on therapeutic, supervised contexts, distinct from recreational substance use.

The Output

We are aggregating 2,000+ responses to highlight «Treatment Deserts» and regional disparities.

Your Impact

By participating, you help us present undeniable data to the media and public health bodies, proving that the UK needs more than just pills to heal.

How Your Region
Compares

Official stats miss the full picture. Our report will show the unfiltered data on how your UK neighbours are actually feeling and healing.

Explore a preview of the interactive map below to see how the final data will be displayed once the study concludes.

SWSEEEEMWAYHWMSCNENWLOSignal SeverityLowMedHighCritical

Region Scores

Preview
London93%
North West81%
North East73%
Scotland67%
West Midlands58%
Yorkshire and the Humber39%
Wales31%
East Midlands23%
East of England17%
South East11%
South West8%

Full regional data available once the study concludes