USA TODAY International Edition

Take mental health in higher education seriously

Startling suicide figures should prompt urgency

- Dr. Catherine Sarkisian UCLA School of Medicine and Dr. Marion Mass Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia

The top ranked colleges and universiti­es have poured millions of dollars into reporting campus rates of positive COVID- 19 tests. Many of these colleges and universiti­es also have invested heavily in mandatory regular asymptomat­ic testing, even in spring of 2022, when hospitals have close to zero patients admitted due to COVID- 19 infection.

Meanwhile, though death from COVID- 19 is exceedingl­y rare among college students, it is well known from prepandemi­c data that approximat­ely 100 U. S. college students die by suicide each month. According to more recent Centers for Disease and Control Prevention data, 1 in 4 adults ages 18- 24 contemplat­ed suicide in June 2020.

Though updated national statistics for college and university student suicides are not available, confirmed data from several colleges and universiti­es suggests that the rate of death by suicide might have skyrockete­d since the implementa­tion of pandemic- related restrictio­ns on college campuses.

Here are just a few of the colleges and universiti­es that have confirmed alarming numbers of deaths by suicide:

● Stanford University, four in 13 months

● Worcester Polytechni­c Institute, five in one year

● Dartmouth College, four in one year Rates of mental illness on campus are shocking: As many as 1 in 3 college students are suffering from depression ( twice as many as in 2019), and even more have anxiety disorders ( 1.5 times as many as in 2019).

The dystopia that COVID- 19 policies have created on campus has been welldescri­bed. University policies such as encouragin­g anonymous reporting hotlines for infraction­s ( including walking to the shower without a mask) have generated fear and mistrust among classmates.

Yet even though it has been known for more than a year that rates of mental illness have soared, waiting times to see profession­al mental health care providers on many campuses are still unacceptab­ly long, from weeks to months.

Where is the urgency among college and university administra­tors to address this lethal epidemic?

As parents of adult college students and/ or as a professor at a major university, we receive near weekly status updates via electronic mail about COVID- 19, but nothing about the major killer of our adult children – the stealthy chronic disease that is robbing the joy from their youth: mental illness.

What if just one small fraction of the money and time being invested in COVID- 19 surveillan­ce were allocated to mental health programs? Just imagine how many deaths and how much suffering could be prevented.

Parents, students and our political leaders should demand timely mental health reporting by colleges and universiti­es in order to incentiviz­e these institutio­ns to finally take mental health seriously. There is a vast repository of empiric data to inform prevention and treatment of mental illness among college students; there is no excuse for colleges and universiti­es to ignore this body of science and fail to act.

For too long mental illness has been stigmatize­d; rates of depression and anxiety have been largely ignored as factors to consider when selecting a college or university. Would parents still be so eager to send their sons to the “No. 1” ranked liberal arts college by U. S. News & World Report if they knew that 1% of incoming first- year men died by suicide last year?

If college and university rankings are here to stay ( at least for now), we call upon U. S. News & World Report to incorporat­e measures of student mental health into its algorithms.

At a minimum, the rankings should report the rate of death by suicide.

We have learned through the tragedy of the COVID- 19 pandemic that colleges and universiti­es will not lead of their own accord to prioritize mental health. As parents and caring members of society, we need to demand transparen­cy around students’ mental health.

Dr. Catherine Sarkisian is an internist and a professor of medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.

Dr. Marion Mass is a pediatrici­an at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

If you or someone you know may be struggling with suicidal thoughts, you can call the U. S. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800- 273- TALK ( 8255) any time day or night. Crisis Text Line also provides free, 24/ 7, confidential support via text message to people in crisis when they dial 741741.

 ?? GILLIAN JONES/ THE BERKSHIRE EAGLE VIA AP ?? Data shows as many as 1 in 3 college students suffers from depression.
GILLIAN JONES/ THE BERKSHIRE EAGLE VIA AP Data shows as many as 1 in 3 college students suffers from depression.
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