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Men's Mental Health

Men die by suicide at 3-4x the rate of women — and are far less likely to seek help. Here's how to change that.

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Last reviewed May 2026 · Editorial standards
Men's Mental HealthMale DepressionMen and TherapyMasculinitySuicide Prevention

The silent crisis in men's mental health

Men die by suicide at nearly 4 times the rate of women — yet men are significantly less likely to seek mental health treatment. This gap between need and help-seeking is one of the most serious public health problems in behavioral health today.

The reasons are complex. Cultural messaging around masculinity — "be strong," "handle it yourself," "don't show weakness" — directly conflicts with the vulnerability required for effective therapy. Many men don't recognize depression in themselves because it often presents differently in men than in women.

How depression presents differently in men

Men with depression are more likely to show: irritability and anger rather than sadness, risk-taking behavior, substance use to cope, physical complaints (pain, fatigue, digestive issues), withdrawal and isolation, and throwing themselves into work. The stereotypical image of depression — crying, visible sadness — leads many men to miss it in themselves.

Why men avoid mental health care

Beyond cultural stigma, men often cite: not knowing what therapy actually involves, concern about confidentiality, not wanting to appear vulnerable, past negative experiences, and practical barriers like time and cost. Many men also respond better to action-oriented, skills-focused approaches than to open-ended exploration of emotions.

Therapy for men works. Studies consistently show that when men engage with therapy, outcomes are equivalent to women's. The challenge is getting past the door — and finding a therapist who works in a way that fits how men engage.

What works for men in therapy

Research shows men often respond well to: problem-solving and skills-focused approaches like CBT, therapists who are direct and practical rather than dwelling on emotions, framing mental health as performance optimization rather than treatment of illness, telehealth which reduces the visibility of seeking help, and brief intensive formats rather than long open-ended therapy.

Finding the right therapist

When searching for a therapist, look for providers who specifically mention working with men or male-specific concerns. Many men find that having a male therapist reduces initial discomfort — though research shows same-gender matching is not required for good outcomes. The most important factor is finding someone you feel comfortable with.

Frequently asked questions
Research shows that when men actually engage with therapy, outcomes are equivalent to women's. The difference is in help-seeking, not in treatment response. Men who enter therapy tend to improve similarly to women. The key is finding an approach and a therapist that feels like a good fit.
For many men, telehealth reduces a significant barrier — you don't have to be seen walking into a therapist's office. Research shows telehealth outcomes are equivalent to in-person therapy. Many men find starting with telehealth makes it easier to take that first step.
Just tell the therapist what brought you in — what's been going on and what you want help with. You don't need to have everything figured out. A good therapist will ask questions and guide the conversation. Many men find the first session much less uncomfortable than they expected.
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