Purpose
Data channel frequently asked questions
CDC's Mental Health Data Channel is the first resource that brings together data across CDC surveys and real-time emergency room visit data to increase public understanding of U.S. mental health trends. Data sources that collect and report national and state-level information on mental health were selected for inclusion in the data channel. CDC plays a key role in providing gold standard public health data to the public and our partners. CDC's Mental Health Data Channel contributes to data modernization efforts to prioritize timely and actionable mental health data at the national and state level.
Many individuals and groups may find CDC's Mental Health Data Channel useful for different reasons.
- Individuals, families, and community members looking for data and resources on how to prevent distress, reduce stigma, and increase well-being for themselves and their loved ones.
- Policymakers, healthcare workers, and state and local governmental health authorities who want to understand mental health in their state or jurisdiction to implement evidence-based interventions.
- Journalists who need updated, accurate statistics on mental health while reporting on national mental health issues.
CDC's Mental Health Data Channel contains the most recent data available at time of publishing. Large-scale behavioral health surveys are typically conducted once a year. This means there can be a lag of one year from the time data was collected to when they are published. Behavioral trends can often change slowly, so both recent and older data are informative and provide context for understanding population mental health and well-being. Most of the information on the data channel is intended to be updated yearly or every other year (see specific data source for cadence); emergency department visits data will be updated monthly.
CDC sources featured in the data channel
Source: Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
Explore these data: BRFSS Prevalence & Trends Data: Home | DPH | CDC
Data source description: BRFSS measures health-related risk behaviors, chronic health conditions, and use of preventive services among U.S. adults through telephone interviews. BRFSS collects data in all 50 states as well as the District of Columbia and three U.S. territories of Guam, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands. Responses were used to produce estimates of experiences, behaviors, and conditions related to mental health and well-being for participating jurisdictions. Nationwide estimates are not available; for more see Data quality and methodology below.
Indicator definitions. Questions from BRFSS within this data channel include at the state level:
- Adults reporting poor physical health -- Now thinking about your physical health, which includes physical illness and injury, for how many days during the past 30 days was your physical health not good? (number of days 1-30, none, don't know/not sure, refused)
- Adults reporting poor mental health -- Now thinking about your mental health, which includes stress, depression, and problems with emotions, for how many days during the past 30 days was your mental health not good? (number of days 1-30, none, don't know/not sure, refused)
- Adults unable to participate in usual activities due to health -- During the past 30 days, how many days did poor physical or mental health keep you from doing your usual activities, such as self-care, work, or recreation? (number of days 1-30, none, don't know/not sure, refused)
- Adults ever diagnosed with depression -- Have you ever been told you have a depression disorder (including depression, major depression, dysthymia, or minor depression)? (yes, no, don't know/not sure, refused)
- Adult life satisfaction -- In general, how satisfied are you with your life? (optional module) (very satisfied, satisfied, dissatisfied, very dissatisfied, don't know/not sure, refused)
- Adults receiving social and emotional support -- How often do you get the social and emotional support that you need? (optional module) (always, usually, sometimes, rarely, never, don't know/not sure, refused)
- Adults reporting loneliness -- How often do you feel socially isolated from others? (Reworded for 2023-2025: How often do you feel lonely? ) (optional module) (always, usually, sometimes, rarely, never, don't know/not sure, refused)
Data quality and methodology:
Interviewers administer the annual BRFSS surveys continuously through the year. Each year, states administer the core questionnaire and have the choice to administer optional modules supported by CDC. While response rates are calculated separately for each state, the median response rate for BRFSS ranged between 44.0% (2021) and 49.4% (2019). Nationwide estimates were not included in the data channel as jurisdictions that report data can vary by year .
Indicators in core modules are collected in all states. Some indicators are only included in an optional module and data may not be available in all years.
- In 2022, Arkansas, Colorado, Guam, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, and Virginia did not collect data for the optional module.
- In 2023, Colorado, Florida, Guam, Oregon, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virgin Islands, Washington, and Wyoming did not collect data for the optional module.
Estimates for states, the District of Columbia, and territories are ranked and classified into four approximately equal sized groups: 0-25th percentile, 26-50th percentile, 51-75th percentile, and 76-100th percentile. The percentiles allow for comparison between states or territories for a specific indicator. Percentile ranges are found in the downloadable CSV files that support each map. Where needed, thresholds were rounded to the nearest whole number. States with no data were excluded from the ranking.
Differences were not compared over time for BRFSS, as nationwide estimates were not presented. Users who wish to assess differences for BRFSS (through 2022 estimates) may use the BRFSS Web Enables Analysis Tool (WEAT) or a similar comparison tool with the estimates and confidence intervals provided in the data table.
Source: National Health Interview Survey | National Health Interview Survey | CDC
Explore these data: NHIS-Adult Summary Health Statistics
Data source description: NHIS monitors the health of the U.S. population by collecting and analyzing data on a broad range of health topics. Interviews are conducted continuously throughout the year, and are initiated in-person, with telephone follow-up. NHIS focuses on the health of children and adults in the United States. One adult household member is randomly selected to be the subject of a detailed health interview. If children are present, one child is also randomly selected. Adults answer on their own behalf, while a knowledgeable adult answers on behalf of the selected child. NHIS topics featured in this data channel include adult life satisfaction, anxiety, depression, mental health conditions, mental health care, and social and emotional support.
Indicator definitions. Questions from NHIS within this data channel include the following at the national level:
- Adult life satisfaction -- In general, how satisfied are you with your life? (very satisfied, satisfied, dissatisfied, very dissatisfied)
- Adults regularly experiencing feelings of anxiety -- Composite measure of frequency and intensity of feelings of anxiety:
- How often do you feel worried, nervous or anxious? Would you say daily, weekly, monthly, a few times a year, or never?
- Thinking about the last time you felt worried, nervous or anxious, how would you describe the level of these feelings? Would you say a little, a lot, or somewhere in between?
- How often do you feel worried, nervous or anxious? Would you say daily, weekly, monthly, a few times a year, or never?
- Adults ever diagnosed with anxiety -- Have you ever been told by a doctor or other health professional that you had any type of anxiety disorder? (yes, no)
- Adults regularly experiencing feelings of depression -- Composite measure of frequency and intensity of feelings of depression:
- How often do you feel depressed? Would you say daily, weekly, monthly, a few times a year, or never?
- Thinking about the last time you felt depressed, how depressed did you feel? Would you say a little, a lot, or somewhere in between?
- How often do you feel depressed? Would you say daily, weekly, monthly, a few times a year, or never?
- Adults ever diagnosed with depression -- Have you ever been told by a doctor or other health professional that you had any type of depression disorder? (yes, no)
- Adults receiving therapy -- During the past 12 months, did you receive counseling or therapy from a mental health professional such as a psychiatrist, psychologist, psychiatric nurse, or clinical social worker? (yes, no)
- Adults receiving social and emotional support -- How often do you get the social and emotional support you need? (always, usually, sometimes, rarely, never)
- Adults unable to participate in social activities due to health -- Because of a physical mental, or emotional condition, do you have difficulty participating in social activities such as visiting friends, attending clubs and meetings, or going to parties? (no difficulty, some difficulty, a lot of difficulty, cannot do this at all)
Data quality and methodology: Data are collected in all 50 states and the District of Columbia continuously throughout the year, with final data published annually. Between 2019 and 2023, the final Sample Adult response rates ranged between 47.0% (2023) to 59.1% (2019) (Survey Description, National Health Interview Survey, 2023). Estimates included in all dashboards have been weighted and incorporate the complex sample design of the NHIS, allowing for nationally representative estimates. Unless otherwise noted, unknowns were not included in the denominators when calculating percentages. Estimates that do not meet NCHS standards of reliability are not displayed. Two-sided 95% confidence intervals are calculated using the Clopper-Pearson method adapted for complex surveys by Korn and Graubard.
Differences over time are assessed at the national level for each indictor between the two most recent years. Two-sided significance tests were used to determine differences and were considered statistically significant if the t-test p-value was <0.05. Terms such as “lower” and “higher” are used to describe differences between the two most recently reported years of data. If no statistical differences were observed, no statement was included. Lack of statistical difference does not necessarily indicate that there are no differences; changes may be observed that do not reach statistical significance because of small numbers in some population demographic groups.
Source: NHIS-Teen | National Health Interview Survey | CDC
Explore these data: NHIS Teen
Data source description: NHIS-Teen was a web-based health survey of teenagers between the ages of 12 and 17. Answers from teenagers helped paint a picture of the health of teenagers living in the United States. NHIS-Teen covered questions on a variety of health topics, including doctor visits, mental health, and social and emotional support.
Indicator definitions:
- National: Youth receiving social and emotional support - How often do you get the social and emotional support you need? (always, usually, sometimes, rarely, never)
Data quality and methodology: Invitations to participate in NHIS-Teen were sent to teenagers living in all 50 states and District of Columbia whose parent or guardian completed the NHIS Sample Child Interview and gave permission for their teenager to be invited. Data were collected from teenagers between July 2021 and December 2023. The NHIS-Teen survey rate was 27.9% (the product of 60.4% of the parents providing permission to contact the teen and 46.2% of those teens participating). Unless otherwise noted, unknowns were not included in the denominators when calculating percentages. Estimates that do not meet NCHS standards of reliability are not displayed. Two-sided 95% confidence intervals are calculated using the Clopper-Pearson method adapted for complex surveys by Korn and Graubard.
Source / Explore these data: National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP) | National Syndromic Surveillance Program (NSSP) | CDC
Data Source Description: Syndromic surveillance provides public health officials with a timely system for detecting, understanding, and monitoring health threats. By tracking symptoms and conditions reported by patients in emergency departments (EDs), public health officials can monitor trends in critical areas. When people seek treatment in the ED, the facility sends de-identified data—including chief complaint, diagnosis codes, patient characteristics, and location—to state and local health departments to share with CDC.
Considerations for interpretation of data: Variability in hospital practices for clinical documentation and assigning diagnostic codes for different mental and behavioral health conditions may lead to under-or-over ascertainment of estimates in electronic healthcare data, including emergency department visits. Patients who were treated outside of an emergency department are not included in these estimates. These data are based on electronic health record data transmitted automatically in near real-time and update as information is added or changed.
Indicator definitions:
Definitions include both (1) visits with acute mental health crises or evaluations where the sole or primary reason for the visit is related to mental health, and (2) visits where a mental health condition may not be the sole reason for the visit but was noted to be present in the discharge diagnosis or chief complaint.
ED data are displayed as rates.
- The rate explains the number of ED visits related to a specific mental health condition out of every 100,000 ED visits. The monthly rate of ED visits related to a condition is calculated as the number of ED visits related to a condition as a fraction of the total number of ED visits in a given month multiplied by 100,000. ED visits with and without mental health conditions where patients were under 12 years old and where age, sex, and race and ethnicity were unknown were included in the denominators when calculating rates for the overall population.
- Rates are also calculated within demographic groups such as age, sex, and race and ethnicity. This is done by comparing the number of ED visits related to a condition within a demographic group as a fraction of the total number of ED visits for that demographic group in a given month multiplied by 100,000.
The following conditions are included in this data channel:
- ED visits related to "overall mental health," which includes mental health conditions below (does not include suicide) as well as chief complaints and discharge diagnoses related to eating disorders, tic disorders, disruptive behavioral disorders, among others.
- ED visits related to anxiety
- ED visits related to depression
- ED visits related to trauma and stressor-related disorders
- ED visits related to bipolar disorders
- ED visits related to schizophrenia spectrum disorders
- ED visits related to suicide attempts
For more details on NSSP definitions for these conditions, see NSSP detailed definitions section below. Efforts are underway to include additional behavioral health diagnostic codes and clinical terms in future iterations of the mental health data channel, including those associated with substance use and opioid use disorder.
Data quality and methodology: More than 6,900 health care facilities covering 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Guam contribute data to NSSP daily. More than 80% of U.S. emergency departments send data to NSSP. Data are collected continuously, and for the purposes of this data channel, reported monthly. Monthly counts that are less than 10 either for the complete population or for specific demographic groups are not shown to protect confidentiality and privacy. Note, rate information may change as data are dynamically adjusted as electronic health record information is updated. However, these changes will not typically affect overall trends.
Explore these data: YRBS Explorer (2023) | CDC
Data source description: YRBSS measures health-related behaviors and experiences that can lead to death and disability among youth and adults. Results help monitor health trends, identify emerging issues, and plan and evaluate programs that can help improve adolescent health. Responses from adolescents were used to produce estimates of experiences, behaviors, and conditions related to mental health and well-being for the nation and participating states.
Indicator Definitions: Questions from YRBSS within this data channel include at national and state levels:
- Youth reporting poor mental health -- During the past 30 days, how often was your mental health not good? (Poor mental health includes stress, anxiety, and depression.) (never, rarely, sometimes, most of the time, always)
- Youth experiencing symptoms of depression -- During the past 12 months, did you ever feel so sad or hopeless almost every day for two weeks or more in a row that you stopped doing some usual activities? (yes, no)
- Youth who reported considering attempting suicide -- During the past 12 months, did you ever seriously consider attempting suicide? (yes, no)
- Youth who reported making a suicide plan -- During the past 12 months, did you make a plan about how you would attempt suicide? (yes, no)
- Youth who reported attempting suicide -- During the past 12 months, how many times did you actually attempt suicide? (0 times, 1 time, 2 or 3 times, 4 or 5 times, 6 or more times)
Data quality and methodology: YRBSS is system of surveys, combining a national survey and surveys at the state, tribal, territorial, or local levels. The national YRBSS data are representative of all public and private school students in grades 9–12 in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. The national questionnaire is administered every other year in school to students in selected schools and classes. The national YRBSS datasets will not contain data from every state because the national YRBS is an independent sample; it is not the aggregate of individual state and local datasets. The state YRBSS surveys are administered in many (but not all) states. Due to differences in sampling and survey administration, the national and state YRBSS data sets are different.
- In 2019, states that did not did not participate or have state representative results were Delaware, Indiana, Minnesota, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.
- In 2021, states that did not participate or have state representative results were Alaska, California, Minnesota, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.
- In 2023, states that did not participate or have state representative results were Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Oregon, South Carolina, Washington, Wyoming.
Between 2019 and 2023, the state-level response rate ranged from 35.4% (2023) to 60.3% (2019). (Overview and Methods for the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System — United States, 2023 | MMWR; 2019 methods report). Estimates are not displayed if the number of respondents within the subgroup did not meet the minimum reporting threshold or data were not available.
For the YRBSS, differences are assessed between the two most recent years. T-tests were used to determine differences and were considered statistically significant if the t-test p-value was <0.05. Terms such as “higher” and “lower” are used to describe differences between the two most recently reported years of data. If no statistical difference was observed, no statement was included. Lack of statistical difference does not necessarily indicate that there are no differences; changes may be observed that do not reach statistical significance because of small numbers in some population demographic groups.
Additional CDC data sources
Looking for children's mental health data?
- Household Pulse Survey - Since 2020, CDC has partnered with the U.S. Census Bureau on the Household Pulse Survey to continuously monitor trends in mental health, health insurance coverage, and problems accessing care. Mental health topics include questions about symptoms of anxiety and depression, social connectedness, and mental health treatment and care.
- National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) assesses health and nutritional status through interviews and physical examinations. Mental health data cover a number of conditions, including depression and anxiety, substance use, and mental health service use and need.
- National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) collects data on visits to non-federally employed office-based physicians who are primarily engaged in direct patient care and, starting in 2006, a separate sample of visits to community health centers. Data are collected on type of provider, medications, primary diagnoses and presence of long-lasting conditions.
- National Hospital Care Survey (NHCS) allows examination of care provided across treatment settings. Data cover physicians' diagnoses, services and procedures, types of health care professionals seen, hospital characteristics, discharge diagnoses, surgical and diagnostic procedures, and prescriptions for ambulatory visits.
- National Post-acute and Long-term Care Study (NPALS) monitors trends in the supply, provision, and use of the major sectors of paid, regulated long-term care services. Mental health data cover mental illness, depression, and service use.
- National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS) collects data from medical examiners, coroners, police, crime labs, and death certificates to understand the circumstances surrounding violent deaths, including suicide. NVDRS can also provide details on the circumstances that may have led to violent deaths, including a history of a known mental disorder.
- Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) collects data on maternal attitudes and experiences before, during, and after pregnancy. Surveillance research includes the prevalence of self-reported postpartum depression and anxiety symptoms.
Other federal data sources
For other data sources on mental health conditions and treatment, visit these sites:
- The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration's (SAMHSA) National Survey on Drug Use and Health website presents data on the substance use disorders, mental health issues, treatment, as well as use of tobacco, alcohol, and drugs among the people ages 12 or older in the United States.
- The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) page allows you to view available statistics on the prevalence and treatment of specific mental health conditions among the U.S. population.
NSSP detailed definitions
Definitions include International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) codes, the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes, Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine – Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) codes, and free text reason for visit (chief complaint terms). Please note that conditions can be defined in different ways in electronic healthcare data, and some jurisdictions may use different definitions. Short codes listed capture all codes underneath (F11 captures F11.X1-F11.X9). Common misspellings of chief complaint terms were also included. Non-decimal versions of all discharge diagnosis codes were also included. Definition names provided as shown in the NSSP Electronic Surveillance System for the Early Notification of Community-Based Epidemics (ESSENCE) system.
For mental health conditions, definitions include visits with acute mental health crises or evaluations (i.e., the sole or primary reason for the visit is related to mental health) as well as visits where a mental health condition was noted to be present (defined as coded in the discharge diagnosis or mentioned in the chief complaint text) but may not be the sole reason for the visit. Codes related to other conditions included within the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, version 5 (DSM-5) that are non-specific to mental health, for example, related to substance use disorders, developmental disabilities, or dementia, were excluded. Codes for mental health conditions were further classified into the categories based on previous literature and with expert judgement from a team of scientists with cross-cutting expertise in mental health – including a practicing psychiatrist – based on best alignment with the DSM-5. For specific types of mental health conditions where the sample size in national syndromic surveillance data was too minimal to meaningfully have its own definition, codes were placed in the "Overall Mental Health Conditions" definition (e.g., reactive attachment disorder). Terms and codes that were non-specific and unable to differentiate between specific conditions (e.g., psychosis; hallucinations) were also included in the "Overall Mental Health Conditions" but not specific individual mental health condition definitions to improve specificity.
For more detailed information on the suicide attempt definition, please visit the knowledge repository.
It is important to remember that there is variability in when mental health conditions may present themselves during our life. Conditions such as schizophrenia spectrum disorders and bipolar disorders are typically diagnosed in early adulthood and are less common among younger age groups. In contrast, many types of disruptive behavioral and impulse control disorders are more common in childhood than in adulthood. Other types of conditions can happen throughout the lifespan, though are uncommon in very early childhood. This is important to be aware of when interpreting results across age spans displayed in the Mental Health Data Channel.
Definition name: CDC Overall Mental Health Conditions
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- Schizophrenia (include misspellings)
- Schizotypal (include misspellings)
- Schizoaffective (include misspellings)
- Grief (include misspellings)
- Grieve (include misspellings)
- Bereave (include misspellings)
- Psych
- Mental health
- Mental evaluation
- Mental problem
- Mentally
- Mental illness
- Reactive attachment
- Auditory hallucination
- Visual hallucination
- Hearing voice
- Evaluation hallucination
- History of hallucination
- Hallucinations patient
- Hallucinations unspecified
- Seeing thing
- Delusion (include misspellings)
- Paranoia (include misspellings)
- Trichotillomania
- Dissociative disorder
- Dissociative conversion
- Dissociative identity
- Dissociative and conversion
- Dissociative tendency
- Dissociative episode
- Dissociative conversion
- Dissociative behavior
- Dissociative amnesia
- Dissociative attentive
- Experiencing dissociation
- Dissociative (when used with depress, depression, psych, dysthymic, anxiety, anxious, traumatic stress, PTSD, adjustment disorder, mental, attention deficit, bipolar, schizophrenia, schizoaffective, schizotypal – and associated misspellings of all terms)
All keyword terms included in the following definitions: CDC Depressive Disorders, CDC Anxiety Disorders, CDC Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders, CDC Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorders, CDC Trauma and Stressor-related Disorders, CDC Disruptive Behavioral and Impulse Control, CDC Bipolar Disorders, CDC Eating Disorders, CDC Tic Disorders, and CDC Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders.
Diagnosis codes:
295.00; 295.01; 295.02; 295.03; 295.04; 295.10; 295.11; 295.12; 295.13; 295.14; 295.20; 295.21; 295.22; 295.23; 295.24; 295.30; 295.31; 295.32; 295.33; 295.34; 295.40; 295.41; 295.42; 295.43; 295.44; 295.50; 295.51; 295.52; 295.53; 295.54; 295.60; 295.61; 295.62; 295.63; 295.64; 295.70; 295.71; 295.72; 295.73; 295.74; 295.80; 295.81; 295.82; 295.83; 295.84; 295.90; 295.91; 295.92; 295.93; 295.94296.90; 296.99; 297.0; 297.1; 297.2; 297.3; 297.8; 297.9; 298.0; 298.1; 298.2; 298.3; 298.4; 298.8; 298.9; 300.10; 300.11; 300.12; 300.13; 399.14; 300.15; 300.81; 300.82; 300.89; 300.7; 307.80; 307.89; 300.9 648.40; 648.41, 648.42, 648.43; 648.44; V62.82
F20; F21; F22; F23; F25; F28; F29; F39; F44; F45; F48; F53.1; F54; F63.3; F93.8; F93.9; F94; F98.9; F99; Z63.4
413307004; 74732009; 231538003; 268664001; 48500005; 191667009; 41526007; 18193002; 224965009; 74506000; 58214004; 268617001; 64905009;191526005; 68890003
All codes included in the following definitions: CDC Depressive Disorders, CDC Anxiety Disorders, CDC Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders, CDC Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorders, CDC Trauma and Stressor-related Disorders, CDC Disruptive Behavioral and Impulse Control, CDC Bipolar Disorders, CDC Eating Disorders, CDC Tic Disorders, and CDC Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders.
Definition name: CDC Depressive Disorders ("Depression")
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- Depression
- Dysthymic
- Dysthymia
- Mood disorder
- Mood disturbance
Diagnosis codes:
296.20; 296.21; 296.22; 296.23; 296.24; 296.25; 296.30; 296.31; 296.32; 296.33; 296.34; 296.35; 300.4; 309.0; 309.1; 296.90; 296.99; 309.28
F32 (except F32.5); F33 (except F33.42); F34.1; F34.9; F43.21; F43.23; O90.6
35489007; 310497006; 370143000; 712823008; 57194009
Definition name: CDC Anxiety Disorders ("Anxiety")
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- Anxiety (include misspellings)
- Anxious
- Panic
- Phobia
Diagnosis codes:
300.00; 300.01; 300.02; 300.09; 300.20; 300.21; 300.22; 300.23; 300.29; 313.0
309.24; 309.28
F40; F41; F43.22; F43.23; F93.0
197480006; 126943008; 21897009; 69479009; 109006; 61387006; 70997004; 191709001
Definition name: CDC Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- Schizophrenia (include misspellings)
- Schizotypal (include misspellings)
- Schizoaffective (include misspellings)
Diagnosis codes:
295.00; 295.01; 295.02; 295.03; 295.04; 295.10; 295.11; 295.12; 295.13; 295.14; 295.20; 295.21; 295.22; 295.23; 295.24; 295.30; 295.31; 295.32; 295.33; 295.34; 295.40; 295.41; 295.42; 295.43; 295.44; 295.50; 295.51; 295.52; 295.53; 295.54; 295.60; 295.61; 295.62; 295.63; 295.64; 295.70; 295.71; 295.72; 295.73; 295.74; 295.80; 295.81; 295.82; 295.83; 295.84; 295.90; 295.91; 295.92; 295.93; 295.94
F20; F21; F25
58214004; 268617001; 64905009; 191526005; 68890003
Definition name: CDC Trauma and Stressor-related Disorders
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- Traumatic stress
- PTSD (including misspellings)
- Adjustment disorder
- Reaction to acute stress
- Acute stress reaction
- Acute stress crisis
- Acute stress eval
- Eval acute stress
- Acute stress behavior (including misspellings for behavior)
- Behavior acute stress
- Reaction to severe stress
- Severe stress reaction
- Severe stress crisis
Diagnosis codes:
308.0; 308.1; 308.2; 308.3; 308.4; 308.9; 309.81; 309.89; 309.9; 309.0; 309.1; 309.24; 309.28;309.29; 309.3; 309.4
F43
67195008; 47505003; 17226007; 57194009; 271952001
Definition name: CDC Bipolar Disorders
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- Bipolar
- Manic
- Cyclothymic
- Mania
- Hypomania
- Hypermania
Diagnosis codes:
296.00; 296.01; 296.02; 296.03; 296.04; 296.05; 296.40; 296.41; 296.42; 296.43; 296.44; 296.45; 296.50; 296.51; 296.52; 296.53; 296.54; 296.55; 296.60; 296.61; 296.62; 296.63; 296.64; 296.65; 296.7; 296.80; 296.81; 296.82; 296.89
F30.1; F30.2; F30.3; F30.8; F30.9; F31.0; F31.1; F31.2; F31.3; F31.4; F31.5; F31.6; F31.7 (only include: F31.70, F31.71, F31.73, F31.75, F31.77); F31.8; F31.9; F34.0
191627008; 371596008; 83225003; 231494001; 284513006; 268619003
Definition name: CDC Suicide Attempt v2
Chief Complaint Search Terms:
- (attempt, OR, try, OR, tried, OR, intentional, OR, commit) AND (end life, OR, suicide, OR, kill herself/himself/themself/themselves)
- suicidal attempt
- si attempt
- self-harm
- self-injury
- self-inflicted harm
- harm to self
- self-directed violence
- (attempt, OR, try, OR, tried, OR, intentional) AND (hang, OR, shoot, OR, overdose, OR, drug overdose, OR, od, OR, drug ingestion, OR, poisoning, OR, poison ingestion)
- Chief Complaint – Suicidal Ideation, must appear in combination with discharge diagnosis/SMOMED codes or chief complaint terms for self-harm
- suicide ideation
- suicidal
- want AND die
- want AND life AND end
- (plan, OR, want, OR, going to) AND self AND (harm, OR, hurt, OR, inflict, OR, lacera, OR, mutilat, OR, shoot, OR, stab, OR, cut, OR, kill himself/herself/themself/themselves)
- (plan, OR, want, OR, going to) AND self AND (hang ANDNOT chang)
Diagnosis codes
- T14.91
- X71-X83
- T36-T50
- T51-T65
- R45.851
- 82313006
- 891003
- 44301001
- 53846008
- 55554002
- 461211000124103
- 86849004
- 269725004
- 274228002
- 287181000
- 287182007
- 287190007
- 460991000124106
- 288311002
- 287185009
- 287183002
- 248073004
- 225045006
- 307578000
- 225050000
- 225049000
- 224946001
- 224945002
- 224947005
- 284759005
- 224949008
- 6471006
- 247650009
- 225457007
- 425104003
- 304594002