Adults Crisis Support (Worldwide)

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Adults Crisis Support (Worldwide)

This page is a calm starting point for adults who may be experiencing crisis, emotional distress, mental health concerns, overwhelm, unsafe situations, or urgent support needs.

It is also for people supporting an adult — including friends, partners, family members, carers, colleagues, support workers, and professionals.

Gentle content note: This page mentions crisis, emotional distress, self-harm, suicide risk, abuse, safety concerns, burnout, and urgent support. If you or someone else is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services now.

What Do You Need Help With Right Now?

Choose the pathway that feels closest to your situation. You do not need to have everything figured out before reaching for support.

I need help for myself

If you feel unsafe, overwhelmed, numb, panicked, hopeless, or unable to cope, support is still available. Start with one safe person, crisis line, or urgent service.

I am worried about another adult

If someone may be unsafe, stay calm, stay nearby if possible, and help them connect with crisis, medical, community, or emergency support.

I am dealing with burnout

Burnout can feel like shutdown, exhaustion, anger, numbness, or being unable to keep going. You deserve support before things get worse.

I need urgent help now

If there is immediate danger, suicide risk, self-harm risk, violence, abuse, medical emergency, or unsafe surroundings, use emergency support first.

What To Do Right Now

In a crisis, the aim is not to solve everything at once. Start with safety, connection, and the next clear step.

Check immediate safety
If there is danger, violence, medical risk, suicide risk, or someone cannot stay safe, contact emergency help now.
Move toward support
Contact a trusted person, crisis line, emergency service, doctor, support worker, or local mental health service.
Reduce risk if safe
Move away from danger, avoid being alone if risk is high, and remove immediate hazards where possible.
Use simple words
Try: “I need help now,” “I’m not safe,” or “Can you stay with me?”
Plan the next support step
Once urgent risk is reduced, connect with ongoing support, local services, or topic-specific help.

Search Support Options

Search by need, role, or support pathway. These cards can later connect to fuller worldwide contacts and country-specific pages.

Urgent Risk

Immediate Safety

For danger, suicide risk, self-harm risk, violence, abuse, medical emergency, or situations where someone cannot stay safe.

Read Safety Guidance
Mental Health

Emotional Distress

For anxiety, panic, depression, trauma, grief, overwhelm, shutdown, numbness, or feeling unable to cope.

View Support Needs
Life Stress

Burnout, Work, Money or Home Stress

Support for adults under pressure from work, finances, housing, caregiving, relationships, loneliness, or daily life stress.

Adult Life Pressures
Supporting Someone

Helping Another Adult

Guidance for friends, partners, family, carers, colleagues, and support people who are worried about an adult.

Helping Guidance
Worldwide Pathway

Oceania

Support pathways for New Zealand, Australia, and Pacific regions.

Add Oceania Link
Worldwide Pathway

UK & Europe

Support options across the UK and European regions.

Add Europe Link
No results matched that search. Try another keyword or choose “All categories.”

Immediate Safety & Urgent Risk

If you or someone else is in immediate danger, at risk of self-harm or suicide, experiencing violence or abuse, medically unwell, missing, or unable to stay safe, please use urgent support first.

Use urgent help when:

  • Someone may hurt themselves or someone else
  • There is violence, abuse, exploitation, or unsafe housing
  • There is overdose, injury, medical risk, or severe distress
  • Someone cannot stay safe alone

Do not manage high risk alone

Contact emergency services, a local crisis line, urgent mental health support, health care, domestic violence support, safeguarding services, or a trusted professional where appropriate.

Support by Need

Adults may need different support depending on what is happening. These sections can later connect to topic-specific crisis pages.

Anxiety, Panic or Overwhelm

For racing thoughts, panic attacks, sensory overload, fear, shutdown, or feeling unable to cope.

Depression, Hopelessness or Numbness

For low mood, loss of motivation, isolation, hopelessness, emotional numbness, or feeling like life is too heavy.

Self-Harm or Suicide Concerns

For thoughts, urges, plans, or behaviours connected to self-harm or suicide risk. Urgent support should come first.

Abuse, Violence or Unsafe Situations

For adults experiencing domestic violence, coercive control, abuse, exploitation, unsafe housing, or fear at home.

Grief, Trauma or Loss

For crisis connected to bereavement, trauma reminders, sudden loss, relationship breakdown, or major life changes.

Burnout and Exhaustion

For adults who feel depleted, unable to keep going, emotionally overloaded, or stretched beyond capacity.

Adult Life Pressures

Crisis can build from everyday pressures becoming too much. Adults may need support that looks at the whole picture, not just one symptom.

Work

Workplace Stress

For burnout, bullying, job loss, workplace pressure, unsafe work environments, or struggling to function at work.

Home

Housing & Financial Stress

For financial pressure, housing insecurity, debt stress, food insecurity, or practical stress affecting mental health.

Relationships

Relationship Crisis

For relationship breakdown, conflict, isolation, loneliness, family pressure, or unsafe relationship dynamics.

If You Are Supporting an Adult in Crisis

You do not need perfect words. Being calm, present, and willing to help connect someone to support can make a real difference.

What helps

  • Stay calm and listen first
  • Ask directly about safety if you are worried
  • Use clear, supportive language
  • Offer to sit with them or help make a call
  • Contact urgent help if risk is high
  • Do not promise secrecy if someone is unsafe

Try to avoid

  • Minimising what they are feeling
  • Saying “just think positive”
  • Arguing during high distress
  • Leaving them alone if they may be unsafe
  • Trying to carry everything yourself
  • Delaying help when danger is present

Worldwide Support Pathways

These regional cards are placeholders for deeper worldwide contacts and country-specific crisis support pages.

You Are Allowed To Need Support

Being an adult does not mean you have to cope alone. Crisis support is not only for when things are at their worst — it can also be the first step back toward safety and steadiness.

A gentle reminder

One message, one call, one trusted person, or one safe step can be enough to begin. You do not need to explain everything perfectly before asking for help.

Important Disclaimer

Aspie Answers provides education, signposting, and supportive information. This page is not a replacement for emergency care, medical advice, therapy, legal advice, safeguarding procedures, domestic violence support, or professional crisis assessment. In an emergency, contact local emergency services immediately.