An Accessible Mental Health Self-Management Innovation for College Students

Author(s):  
Joseph J. O’Rourke ◽  
Regina Casey ◽  
Jenn Cusick ◽  
Shakeel Lochan ◽  
Monica Sterling ◽  
...  

This article outlines findings from two Wellness Recovery Action Plan® workshops for college students in Western Canada. Widely recognized mental health challenges among college students and a service need demonstrated in pilot sessions served as rationale for providing one of the first iterations of WRAP in a college setting.

2010 ◽  
Vol 34 (7) ◽  
pp. 279-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Hill ◽  
Glenn Roberts ◽  
Wilson Igbrude

Aims and methodSupporting self-management is a core ambition of progressive mental health services, but little is known about how to achieve this. Support time and recovery (STaR) workers are routinely taught the Wellness Recovery Action Plan (WRAP). This study explores their capacity to support self-management using WRAP.ResultsThe audited STaR trainees had introduced an average of nine service users each to WRAP. There was a trend for those with personal experience of mental illness to introduce more clients to WRAP and even more so for those who had used WRAP themselves. Qualitative analysis suggested a range of factors that may mediate whether people engage with self-management or not.Clinical implicationsThe capacity of STaR workers and others to support people in self-management may depend on more than knowledge of self-management methods and having personal experience of mental health problems and services. Important factors may also include specific experience of the methods introduced, ongoing training, accountability and supervision.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Parr

Purpose. To examine the co-occurrence of mental health (depression, anxiety, nonsuicidal self-injury, suicide ideation) and substance use outcomes among female, male, and transgender–gender nonbinary (TNB) college students exposed to sexual assault (SA).Methods. Data were drawn from a 2018 U.S. national survey of college student wellbeing (N = 50,438). Inverse propensity-weighted three-step latent class analysis was used to examine co-occurrence of outcomes while adjusting for 31 potential confounders of the relation between SA exposure and outcomes.Results. Four latent classes were identified for female and male participants, and two for TNB participants, reflecting a range from low to high outcome risk. Exposure to SA was associated with significantly and substantially increased odds (ORs: 2.03–3.64) of membership to the highest-risk outcome class compared to the lowest risk class.Conclusions. Exposure to SA in the college setting is associated with substantially increased risk of co-occurrence of depression, anxiety, non-suicidal self-injury, and suicide ideation regardless of gender identity.


Author(s):  
Noora Shrestha

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought into attention the mental health of various affected populations including children and youth. The objective of the study was to assess the perceived mental health and learning environment of college students in Nepal during COVID-19 outbreak. The college students enrolled in bachelor’s degree completed a self-administered questionnaire survey. The students were approached through text messaging and email and selected with non-probability sampling during the pandemic. The study assessed information on demographic characteristics, academic difficulties, financial and family difficulties, and mental health issues with coping mechanism during the outbreak. Descriptive findings revealed that the academic difficulties were more likely to be reported by high percentage of students. The students also described they were facing family and financial problems. High percentage of students was associated with depressive thought. To cope with anxiety and depressive thoughts, more than half students have pursued support from family and friends, helped themselves with self-management activities during the pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic situation is making a significant negative impact on mental health and learning environment of college students. The study suggests that health service providers and educators need to consider proactive measures to support the mental health and learning environment of students. KEYWORDS: COVID-19, Mental Health, Learning Environment, Academic Difficulties, Financial Problems, Depressive Thought, Coping Mechanism, Self-management.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 98-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina B. Gee ◽  
Gagan S. Khera ◽  
Alyssa T. Poblete ◽  
Barunie Kim ◽  
Syeda Y. Buchwach

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