In collaboration with Cibyl, Accentureโ€™s report found that a staggering 80% of students said Covid contributed to their poor mental health.

โ€œThereโ€™s a significant disconnect between the experiences of different studentsโ€

According to the report, UK students are struggling with โ€œthe pressure to achieveโ€, as well as finding it difficult to make friends and continuously having problems with their mental wellbeing.

โ€œDespite the resources and support services universities provide, university is not a dream experience for everyone,โ€ said Barbara Harvey, managing director of Accenture.

โ€œThereโ€™s a significant disconnect between the experiences of different students,โ€ she added.

In recent years, many universities and society in general has pushed a spotlight onto mental health and how integral it is to a healthy life as well as physical health.

However, the report found that while virtually all universities provide such support, most students โ€œarenโ€™t utilising the services on offerโ€.

โ€œDuring the pandemic, many [universities] expanded the range and reach of their offeringsโ€ฆ but awareness of services doesnโ€™t necessarily lead to studentโ€™s knowing how to access what they need,โ€ the report reads.

It also pointed out that the most commonly used services are not โ€œnecessarily the most effective onesโ€ and half the students surveyed said they did not feel their mental health was โ€œwell supported overallโ€.

The report also mentions that a compounding of the issue could be the rough transition from CAMHS to adult services.

โ€œHalf of adult mental health conditions arise by the age of 14โ€ฆ yet at university, more of the onus for arranging care suddenly falls on the studentโ€™s shoulders, just when many are living away from home for the first time and having to navigate unfamiliar territory,โ€ it reads.

โ€œThe possibility of falling through the net in this context is all too real,โ€ it adds.

The report also focused on the different demographics that exposed the complexity of student mental healthcare needs.

โ€œTrans students, students with physical disabilities, gay and lesbian students, and those from lower socioeconomic groups reported the highest levels of poor mental health,โ€ the report said.

Women are more likely to report it than men, and those in their second and final years report it more often โ€“ which โ€œimplicates the role of pressureโ€ in declining mental health among students.

When it came to conditions, by far the most common condition reported was anxiety, which 72% of students surveyed said was something they experienced.

It was followed by depression at 53%, and burnout at 36%.

Despite Covid playing a part in 80% of studentsโ€™ declining mental health, only 13% said it was the sole cause of their issues.

โ€œOur study was conducted in an unprecedented climate, in a year when students worked largely online,โ€ the report said.

โ€œWe have seen Covid-19 erode young peoplesโ€™ wellbeing and our students, too felt its impact.โ€

The report proposes some recommendations for universities โ€“ understanding the mental health risk profile of students before they arrive on campus is top of the list.

โ€œ[Universities should] invest in target interventions to more vulnerable groups, and understand the support different student groups need,โ€ the report recommends.

โ€œWe have seen Covid-19 erode young peoplesโ€™ wellbeingโ€

It lists why certain groups may suffer worse than others โ€“ for example, individuals from lower socioeconomic backgrounds are less likely to have had any training on taking care of their own mental health, with โ€œfewer coping strategiesโ€ โ€“ the report says universities have the โ€œopportunity to level the playing fieldโ€.

It also recommends educating students in what good mental health is and how to maintain it, as well as helping students to adapt to university life and โ€œforge meaningful friendshipsโ€.

Finally, it says that chancellors of universities should adopt principles sourced in the Hippocratic Oath: โ€œdo no harmโ€ and โ€œprevention is better than cureโ€.

It says that working with students to understand pressure, considering flexibility on courses and address that pressure by recognising the difference between students and their ability to handle certain workloads.

โ€œOur hope is to help universities better understand student mental health, and accordingly, change the way they support student wellbeing,โ€ Harvey said.

Related articles

Source