| Dramatic Increases Seen in College Students' Mental Health Problems | |
February 3,2003
WASHINGTON --
The findings are reported on in the February issue of Professional
Psychology: Research and Practice, a journal of the American Psychological
Association (APA).
Psychologist Sherry A. Benton, Ph.D. and colleagues at Kansas State University
examined trends in counseling center clients' problems from the perspective of
the therapist at the time of therapy termination from 1988-1989 through
2000-2001. Results indicate that in 14 of the 19 problem areas studied,
counseling center clinicians reported increases in the percentages of
individuals having difficulties. Up until 1994, relationship problems were the
most frequently reported client problem, according to the study. But since that
time, stress and anxiety problems were reported more frequently than
relationship problems, with dramatic increases seen in the number of students
seeking help for depression, suicidal thoughts and sexual assault.
The patterns of change in the students' problems over the 13-year period were
complex, according to the study. Three time periods were analyzed: academic
years 1988-1992, 1992-1996, and 1996-2001 (the study period ended prior to the
9/11/01 terrorist attacks). Six problems areas showed steep increases from the
first time period to the second and then appeared to stabilize from the second
to the third time period. Problems following this pattern included relationship
problems, stress/anxiety, family issues, physical problems, personality
disorders, suicidal thought and sexual assault. Other problem areas showed a
steady increase in all three time periods, including depression, grief, and
academic and developmental problems.
Some other problems, including those related to educational and vocational
choice issues declined during the middle time period and increased in the more
recent time period. Some serious problems, however, showed no significant change
over the 13 years of the study, including those seeking help for substance
abuse, eating disorders, legal problems and chronic mental illness.
Similar studies need to be conducted at other university counseling centers, say
the authors, to verify what they believe may be a national trend. "If these
observed patterns of change prove to be consistent with those at other
counseling centers, then it is evident that therapists in counseling centers are
seeing students with more critical needs than a decade ago." This comes at a
time when students are finding fewer options for counseling and mental health
care in the community, leaving the role of providing care primarily in the hands
of university counseling center staff, according to the researchers.
Article: "Changes in Counseling Center Client Problems Across 13 Years," Sherry
A. Benton, Ph.D., John M. Robertson, Ph.D., Wen-Chih Tseng, M.Ed., Fred B.
Newton, Ph.D., and Stephen L. Benton, Ph.D., Kansas State University;
Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, Vol. 34, No. 1.
Full text of the article is available at
http://www.apa.org/journals/pro/press_releases/february_2003/pro34166.html
---American Psychological Association (APA)
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