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The Talk Well live impact dashboard

Our Live Impact Dashboard provides a true picture of the mental health needs of the young people we support.

Why do we have a dashboard?

Talk Well are committed to honest and transparent social impact reporting. Our Live Impact Dashboard can be accessed year-round for an immediate snapshot of our social impact, including our successes and challenges.

You can better understand the impact Talk Well has by reading through the seven tabs on the dashboard. We believe the dashboard gives a comprehensive but succinct, up-to-date record that summarises our impact in line with our vision which is to ensure that every young person receives support with their mental health when they need it most and in a way that suits their needs. Equity and choice are at the heart of everything we do.

The dashboard uses our full dataset from the past 24 months (current date range included on Slide 1). Data is refreshed monthly and is anonymised to protect identities in line with our information and data protection governance.

How to use the dashboard

For the best experience, we recommend you view and interact on a desktop device.

You can select navigation and expand to full-page using the navigation arrows at the bottom of dashboard for improved viewing.

Information icons are included on some slides on the dashboard. Hovering over these icons will provide additional explanation to help you better understand what you’re looking at.

Filters are present on graphs where it is possible to isolate specific information relating to age/gender/ethnicity.

*Source: Mental Health of Children and Young People Surveys, NHS England, November 2023, wave 4 follow up to the 2017 survey: https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/mental-health-of-children-and-young-people-in-england This was 20.3% of 8 to 16 year olds, 23.3% of 17 to 19 year olds and 21.7% of 20 to 25 year olds.

"At 20 years old I was unsure if Talk Well was going to be suitable for me, but I found I was treated like an adult and didn’t at all feel patronised."