More College Students Seeking Mental Health Help, Says Study
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa
More college students are seeking help for mental illness than in previous years, according to the 2005 National Survey of Counseling Directors.
About 90 percent of the 366 counseling center directors surveyed reported an increase in clients with severe psychological problems, according to the survey, conducted by Dr. Robert Gallagher, an adjunct professor at the University of Pittsburgh. In 2004, 85.8 reported an increase. The survey has been published annually since 1981 by the International Association of Counseling Services, a professional accrediting organization based in Alexandria, Va.
Ninety-six percent of the directors said psychological disorders are a growing concern on campuses. Campus counselors are seeing more major depression, anxiety disorders and bipolar disorders, but the counselors say it’s not necessarily that more students are ill. It’s that more students seek help because mental illness carries less of a stigma and better medications make it possible for students with severe psychological problems to attend college.
“We have students who come to us already on medications, who were treated as a teenager,” says Dr. Paul Natvig, a psychiatrist at the University of Iowa Student Health Service. “I see patients who do have serious illnesses like schizophrenia. Because of the treatment, they’re able to stay in school and be very successful.”
Still, a growing percentage of directors — 69 percent, up from 55 percent in 2004 — expressed concern about an increase in self-injuries among students. One in three directors said there is a need to find better referral sources for students needing long-term care. In 2004, just 54 percent of directors expressed that concern.