Why Some Young People Fear Social Isolation More Than COVID-19

Audrey just turned 18 and relishes crossing into adulthood: She voted for the first time this year, graduated high school and is college-bound next month. The honors student typically wakes up “a bundle of nerves,” she says, which had fueled her work volunteering, playing varsity sports and leading student government.

But for years, she also struggled with anxiety, depression and obsessive compulsive disorder — all of which drove her to work harder.

“I was spending so much time on my homework, I felt like I was losing my friends — so my thoughts would race over and over again about my friends,” says Audrey. “And then I would have the difficult thoughts about suicide and some scarier stuff.” (NPR agreed to use only her first name to protect her medical privacy.)

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