The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two students’ tool helps peers find mental health resources

- By Bethany Ao

PHILADELPH­IA — As colleges grapple with rising youth suicide rates and a growing demand for mental health resources, two students at Widener University in Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, decided to tackle the issue themselves. They created a tool for the school’s student portal, called myWidener, that allows their peers to ask for help more easily.

Michaela Kolenkiewi­cz, 22, and Christiana Dunn, 21, said the idea for the tool developed from their mutual interest in mental health. The tool pulls up a list of resources, such as the number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (800-273-8255) and informatio­n on the university’s Counseling and Psychologi­cal Services (CAPS), when users type the word “breathe” into the search bar.

Making informatio­n about counseling centers easy for students to find is a priority at other universiti­es in the Philadelph­ia area as well. Many colleges do that through the student portal because students are already used to accessing the site to check their email, submit assignment­s, see their grades and add money to their meal cards.

Villanova University’s portal, MyNova, directs users who search “depression” to a page with phone numbers for the school’s counseling center and health services. Bryn Mawr College also allows students to access a list of resources from their student portal, called BIONIC, and Haverford College students can schedule counseling appointmen­ts online. Rowan University uses a separate system for scheduling appointmen­ts and accessing health records through its wellness center, which students can access online through the self-service banner on the school’s website.

Widener’s Kolenkiewi­cz, a senior majoring in psychology, said that, initially, she just wanted to investigat­e what her university was doing for its students regarding mental health.

“I was looking at suicide on college campuses, and I read so many articles on how these schools failed their students,” she said. “And when I went to my.widener.edu and typed in words like ‘depression’ and ‘suicide’ and ‘mental health,’ nothing came up. I thought that was crazy.”

Since 2013, Widener has lost two students to suicide, and mental health continues to be a priority for colleges in the Philadelph­ia area following three students who died by suicide at Rowan University last fall. In fact, Widener has had a group called Active Minds to spread mental health awareness since 2015, but it isn’t linked to my.widener.edu.

Kolenkiewi­cz said her research made her wonder whether Widener students knew where the counseling center was located and the support lines they could reach out to by phone or text if they were struggling.

At the time, she was working with Angela Corbo, an associate professor in communicat­ion studies. Corbo, who used to work in student affairs, was immediatel­y interested in Kolenkiewi­cz’s idea of bringing more awareness to what mental-health resources were offered on campus.

“I felt that by creating a positive promotion on campus that talked about mental health, like the whole idea of, ‘It’s OK not to be OK,’ that would create a different tone on campus,” Corbo said. “People wouldn’t feel the need to isolate themselves.”

 ?? JOSE F. MORENO / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Student Michaela Kolenkiewi­cz at Widener University in Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, shows a student portal app. She and another student worked together to develop a feature for Widener’s student portal where students can type “breathe” in the search bar and a list of mental health services comes up.
JOSE F. MORENO / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Student Michaela Kolenkiewi­cz at Widener University in Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, shows a student portal app. She and another student worked together to develop a feature for Widener’s student portal where students can type “breathe” in the search bar and a list of mental health services comes up.

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