4 young social impact leaders open up about how they manage mental wellness

The social impact workforce is overworked and overwhelmed, but these leaders are doing things differently

Why It Matters

A sector-wide mental health crisis is looming. Young people are far more likely to report experiencing stress, burnout, anxiety and depression than previous generations. At the same time, youth are also more likely to pursue purpose-oriented careers — and the social impact sector can be high-stress, with an overworked and underpaid workforce.

var TRINITY_TTS_WP_CONFIG = {"cleanText":"4 young social impact leaders open up about how they manage mental wellness. Young people want purposeful careers. Some research even suggests they\u2019d be willing to take a pay cut for a job that aligns with their values.\u00a0 But \u2014\u00a0especially in times of crisis, like now \u2014\u00a0a career in helping people can be mentally taxing. Communities social purpose organizations serve are devastated by the pandemic, health-wise, socially and economically, and trying to respond to the magnitude of that devastation is taking a toll on the sector\u2019s workers. Experts say a sector-wide mental health crisis is looming.\u00a0 The good news is that there\u2019s a new generation of social impact professionals working hard to set an example for the

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