Young people are not as happy as they used to get recent survey

The curve of happiness is collapsing. For decades, research showed that people experienced happiness in their lifetime, looking like a U-shaped curve. When he was young, Khushi became high, then drowned in midlife, just as he got old to get up again. But recent surveys show that young adults are not as happy as they used to be, and the U-shaped curve is starting to level.
This pattern has shown again in a new study, one of the collections of letters published on Wednesday in Nature Mental Health Journal. They are the first publication based on the inaugural wave of data from the global rich study, a collaboration Harvard and the University of Bayler.
Data collected by Galp, primarily in 2023, was taken from surveys of self-reported of more than 2,00,000 people in more than 20 countries. It was found that, on average, young adults aged 18 to 29 were struggling – not only with happiness, but also with physical and mental health, meaning in life, quality of relationships and financial security. The participants were relatively less measures for the participants to flourish on average by average. “This is a very great picture,” Tyler Je Vendorwell said, the lead author of the study and director of the human rich program of Harvard. This raises an important question, he said: “Are we investing in the good of the youth enough?”
A report by 2023 Harvard found that young adults in the US doubling the rates of anxiety and depression as teenagers double. At its top, perfection has touched the sky among college students, which often feel pressure to meet unrealistic expectations. Participation in community organizations has declined, and loneliness is now prevalent among young adults because it is one of the older adults. A professor at Yale said, “The study after the study shows that social relations are important for happiness, and the youth are spending less time with friends a decade ago.” “Also, like people of all ages, young people are facing a world with a complete host of global issues – from climate to political polarization.” A professor at Dartmouth College said that there are many principles about why young people are in trouble, but they suspect that the problem is largely what they are not doing, as they are busy watching the screen.