Key Message
Mental health and mental illness are not the same thing.
👉 The main difference is:
- Mental health = everyone has it
- Mental illness = a diagnosable condition some people have
What Is Mental Health?
Mental health is:
- A person’s emotional, psychological, and social well-being
It affects how we:
- Think
- Feel
- Act
- Relate to others
Mental Health Is a Spectrum
Mental health exists on a continuum, meaning it can change:
- Good mental wellbeing
- Average mental wellbeing
- Poor mental wellbeing
👉 It is not fixed and can change over time.
Everyone Has Mental Health
- All people have mental health
- It is always present, just like physical health
Good Mental Health Includes:
- Coping with stress
- Enjoying life
- Maintaining relationships
- Feeling emotionally balanced
What Is Mental Illness?
Mental illness refers to:
- Diagnosable medical conditions
- That affect mood, thinking, and behaviour
Examples include:
- Depression
- Anxiety disorder
- Schizophrenia
Impact of Mental Illness
Mental illness can:
- Disrupt daily life
- Affect work or education
- Impact relationships
- Make everyday tasks difficult
Treatment and Support
Mental illness often requires:
- Therapy or counselling
- Medication (in some cases)
- Professional support
👉 It is:
- A medical condition, not a personal weakness
Key Differences
1. Definition
- Mental health → overall emotional wellbeing
- Mental illness → specific diagnosable condition
2. Who It Affects
- Mental health → everyone
- Mental illness → some people
3. Nature
- Mental health → constantly changing state
- Mental illness → persistent condition (may be long-term or episodic)
4. Impact
-
Mental health:
- Can range from positive to poor wellbeing
-
Mental illness:
- Usually causes significant distress or impairment
Important Understanding
👉 You can:
-
Have poor mental health without having a mental illness
(e.g. stress, grief, burnout) -
Have a mental illness and still experience good mental health at times
(especially with support and treatment)
Self-Care vs Treatment
-
Mental health → supported by:
- Sleep
- Exercise
- Relationships
- Self-care
-
Mental illness → may require:
- Clinical treatment
- Therapy
- Medication
Why This Difference Matters
Understanding the difference helps to:
- Reduce stigma
- Improve support
- Encourage early help-seeking
- Avoid misunderstanding distress
Simple Summary (Easy Read Style)
- Mental health is something everyone has
- It is how we think, feel, and cope
- Mental health can go up or down
- Mental illness is a medical condition
- It can affect daily life
- It may need treatment and support
- A person can have both good and poor mental health at different times
Powerful Insight for Your Book
👉 “Mental health is part of everyone’s life — mental illness is one part of health, not the whole story.”