Georgia Behavioral Health

Two men sitting together, one offering emotional support to the other, representing affirming mental health care for men at Georgia Behavioral Health in Atlanta

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Men and Mental Health: What the Research Says and Why It Matters

June is Men's Mental Health Month. And while awareness months come and go, the statistics behind men's mental health are not seasonal. They are persistent, underreported, and in many cases, preventable.

Men are significantly less likely to seek mental health treatment than women, yet they account for nearly 80 percent of suicide deaths in the United States. That gap between suffering and help-seeking is not a character flaw. It is a systemic problem rooted in stigma, socialization, and a healthcare system that has historically underserved men when it comes to emotional wellbeing.

This article breaks down what the research actually shows, why men struggle to ask for help, and what effective treatment looks like when they do.

The Numbers Behind Men's Mental Health

The data on men's mental health paints a clear picture of a population that is struggling in silence.

According to the National Institute of Mental Health, approximately 6 million men in the United States are affected by depression each year. That figure is widely considered an undercount because men are less likely to report symptoms, and because depression in men often presents differently than the diagnostic criteria most clinicians are trained to recognize.

The CDC reports that men die by suicide at a rate approximately four times higher than women. In 2022, men accounted for 79 percent of all suicide deaths in the United States.

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2022

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration has consistently found that men with a mental health condition are far less likely than women to have received mental health treatment in the past year.

These numbers point to one consistent conclusion: men are experiencing significant mental health challenges and are not getting adequate care.

Why Men Do Not Seek Help

Understanding the treatment gap requires understanding why it exists. The barriers are real, and they go beyond individual reluctance.

Cultural Messaging Around Masculinity

From early childhood, many men absorb messages that emotional expression is weakness, that asking for help signals failure, and that the appropriate response to suffering is to push through it. These messages are reinforced across families, peer groups, media, and workplaces in ways that make vulnerability feel genuinely unsafe.

Research published in the Psychology of Men and Masculinity has consistently linked traditional masculine norms to lower rates of help-seeking behavior and higher rates of untreated depression.

Depression Looks Different in Men

Men are less likely to report sadness, tearfulness, or the classic emotional symptoms most people associate with depression. Instead, depression in men more commonly presents as:

  • Irritability, anger, or agitation
  • Physical complaints including fatigue, headaches, or digestive issues
  • Increased use of alcohol or substances
  • Reckless or risk-taking behavior
  • Withdrawal from relationships and activities
  • Difficulty concentrating or making decisions
  • Overworking or staying constantly busy to avoid emotional awareness

Because these symptoms do not match the textbook presentation of depression, men often go undiagnosed for years. And because they do not recognize their own experience as depression, they do not know to seek treatment.

The Role of Treatment-Resistant Depression in Men

For men who do eventually seek treatment, a significant number do not respond adequately to standard antidepressants. Treatment-resistant depression, defined as depression that has not responded to at least two adequate antidepressant trials, affects approximately one in three people with major depressive disorder.

In men, the stakes of undertreated or treatment-resistant depression are particularly high. Prolonged untreated depression is one of the strongest predictors of suicide risk, and men are less likely to have support systems in place or to communicate distress before a crisis point is reached.

Chronic stress drives measurable neurobiological changes including cortical thinning, HPA axis dysregulation, and neuroinflammation, all of which are associated with depression that does not respond to serotonin-based medications.

Source: Frontiers in Psychiatry, 2025

Men in high-demand environments facing financial pressure, relationship difficulties, or chronic work stress may be particularly vulnerable to this pathway. You can read more about that connection in our article on chronic stress and treatment-resistant depression.

What Effective Treatment for Men Looks Like

The most important step is an accurate evaluation that accounts for how depression actually presents in men, not just how it presents in the textbook. From there, treatment options have expanded significantly and now include approaches that work through entirely different mechanisms than traditional antidepressants.

  • TMS Therapy: A non-invasive, FDA-cleared treatment that uses magnetic pulses to directly stimulate mood-regulating circuits in the brain. Patients remain awake throughout, require no sedation, and can return to daily activities immediately.
  • SPRAVATO (Esketamine): An FDA-approved nasal spray that works on the glutamate system rather than the serotonin system. It can produce rapid symptom relief, in some cases within hours of the first session, and is specifically approved for treatment-resistant depression.
  • IV Ketamine Therapy: A fast-acting infusion treatment targeting the brain's glutamate system with significant results for patients who have not responded to traditional medications.
  • EMDR Therapy: For men dealing with trauma or adverse life experiences that are driving or compounding depression, EMDR addresses root psychological drivers that medication alone cannot reach.
  • Psychiatric Care: Comprehensive evaluation and medication management that looks beyond a single diagnosis to understand the full clinical picture, including co-occurring conditions that may be complicating treatment response.

What Needs to Change

Awareness months matter when they move beyond graphics and into actual conversation. Men's Mental Health Month is an opportunity to normalize help-seeking in communities, workplaces, and families where the message has historically been to stay silent.

That means talking openly about what depression actually looks like in men. It means removing the language of weakness from mental health conversations. And it means making sure men know that not responding to antidepressants is not a personal failure. It is a clinical signal that a different approach is needed.

If you are a man who has been struggling for months or years and has not found relief through medication, you have not run out of options. The most important thing you can do is ask for an evaluation from a provider who specializes in treatment-resistant cases.

Men's Mental Health Treatment in Norcross, GA

At Georgia Behavioral Health, we provide comprehensive psychiatric evaluations and advanced treatment options for men experiencing mood disorders and treatment-resistant depression in the Atlanta area.

Our services include TMS therapy, SPRAVATO, IV ketamine therapy, psychiatric care, and talk therapy, designed for patients who need more than a prescription refill. If you or someone you care about has been struggling and has not found relief, we are here.

People Also Ask

1. Why is men's mental health undertreated?
Men are significantly less likely to seek mental health treatment due to cultural stigma around emotional expression, the fact that depression presents differently in men than in traditional diagnostic criteria, and a lack of awareness that what they are experiencing is a treatable medical condition. Research consistently shows that traditional masculine norms are associated with lower rates of help-seeking behavior.
2. What does depression look like in men?
Depression in men often presents as irritability, anger, increased alcohol or substance use, physical complaints like fatigue and headaches, reckless behavior, social withdrawal, and overworking rather than the classic sadness and tearfulness most people associate with depression. This different presentation means men are frequently undiagnosed for years.
3. What is treatment-resistant depression and how common is it in men?
Treatment-resistant depression is defined as depression that has not responded adequately to at least two antidepressant treatments at appropriate doses and duration. Research suggests approximately 30 percent of people with major depressive disorder do not achieve adequate relief from traditional antidepressants. For men who delay treatment and accumulate chronic stress over time, the neurobiological changes that drive treatment resistance may be more pronounced.
4. What treatment options exist for men with depression that is not responding to medication?
Advanced options specifically designed for treatment-resistant depression include TMS therapy (FDA-cleared, non-invasive brain stimulation), SPRAVATO (FDA-approved esketamine nasal spray targeting the glutamate system), and IV ketamine therapy. These treatments work through completely different mechanisms than traditional antidepressants and have shown significant results for patients who have not found relief through medication alone.
5. How do I know if I should seek a psychiatric evaluation for depression?
If you have been experiencing persistent low mood, irritability, fatigue, withdrawal, or difficulty functioning for more than two weeks, especially if you have already tried medication without adequate relief, a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation is an important next step. An evaluation can identify co-occurring conditions, assess whether treatment resistance is a factor, and open the door to more targeted care.