Recognizing a Mental Health, explained:

When to get help:

If you (or someone you know) shows sudden changes in thinking, behavior, or perception, especially involving Self Harm, Suicide, confusion, hallucinations, seek urgent medical help immediately (emergency services or a doctor).

Get Help Immediately:

If you think your friend is in danger, stay with them if you can. Do not leave a suicidal person alone. Call 911, take the person to an emergency room, or the Suicide and Crisis hotline at 988. Get support from other friends and family members, even if your friend asks you not to. It’s too serious to keep secret, and you can’t keep your friend safe all on your own. If your friend has been seeing a mental health professional (therapist, counselor, psychologist, social worker, or psychiatrist), call them and make them aware of the situation.”

Recognizing a mental health emergency means identifying when someone’s thoughts, emotions, or behaviors have become dangerous, severely impaired, or rapidly destabilized. Mental health emergencies require immediate attention because there may be a risk of harm to self, harm to others, or inability to care for basic needs.

Common mental health emergencies may include severe depression with suicidal intent, psychosis, panic crises, mania, substance induced crises, trauma reactions, and extreme dissociation.

Warning signs may include:

  • Talking about suicide, hopelessness, or wanting to disappear
  • Self-harm behaviors or threats
  • Sudden extreme mood changes
  • Hallucinations (seeing or hearing things others do not)
  • Delusions or paranoid beliefs
  • Severe confusion or disorientation
  • Aggressive or violent behavior
  • Inability to function in daily life
  • Catatonia or extreme withdrawal
  • Panic attacks that impair breathing, movement, or awareness
  • Intoxication or overdose
  • Not eating, sleeping, or caring for oneself for extended periods

A person may also show subtle signs before a crisis fully develops:

  • Social isolation
  • Giving away possessions
  • Increased substance use
  • Reckless behavior
  • Emotional numbness
  • Intense agitation or restlessness
  • Expressions of feeling trapped or unbearable psychological pain

Some high-risk conditions associated with emergencies may include:

  • Major Depressive Disorder
  • Bipolar Disorder
  • Schizophrenia
  • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
  • Substance Use Disorder

If someone appears to be in immediate danger (Contact emergency services or a crisis team):

  1. Stay calm and speak clearly.
  2. Reduce stimulation and avoid confrontation.
  3. Do not leave the person alone if suicide risk is high.
  4. Contact emergency services or a crisis team if safety is threatened.
  5. Encourage professional evaluation as soon as possible.

In the United States, people can contact:

  • 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline (call or text 988)
  • Emergency services (911) if there is immediate danger
  • Local psychiatric emergency services or hospital emergency departments

The Emergency Services will distinguish between emotional distress and a true emergency. Intense sadness, anxiety, or stress may mean a psychiatric emergency, but they should still be taken seriously when functioning declines or safety concerns emerge.

From a psychological perspective, early recognition matters because crises often escalate in stages rather than appearing suddenly. Intervention during the early warning phase may significantly reduce harm and improve outcomes.

Shervan K Shahhian

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