The Mercury News

Depression, anxiety ‘eat up our kids’

Students are clamoring for more services that can help them cope with their mental health

- By Felicia Mello

“One of the barriers (to graduating on time) is mental health issues, and we should be helping (students) overcome them. Otherwise, we’re not maximizing our investment.” — State Sen. Richard Pan

When student leaders from 23 California State University campuses came together last fall to set priorities for the academic year, improving campus mental health services received more nomination­s than any other issue. It beat out even that perennial concern, tuition costs.

Cal State Student Associatio­n president Maggie White said she’s not surprised.

“We’re seeing wait times at counseling centers that are exceeding two or three weeks, people turned away after a few appointmen­ts because they’ve exceeded the maximum allotment, and students not feeling comfortabl­e going to counselors because no one looks like them or reflects their experience,” White said.

As the stigma attached to mental health care fades, California students are increasing­ly clamoring for more on-campus services that can help them cope with anxiety, depression and the stresses of a contentiou­s political climate and rising living expenses. Several bills pending in the California Legislatur­e would set aside resources for mental health care at the state’s public colleges and universiti­es.

Mental health advocates say on-campus care is especially important because people often first experience psychologi­cal problems during their young adult years.

“It’s so much the age when serious mental illness manifests itself, and here we have these institutio­ns that could absolutely be identifyin­g this early on,” said Deborah Anderluh, a spokespers­on for the Steinberg Institute,

which lobbies for more funding for mental health treatment.

Only eight of the Cal State system’s 23 campuses meet the standard of one counselor per 1,000 to 1,500 students set by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Counseling Services — the national accreditor for campus counseling centers — according to a survey by the student associatio­n.

Many community colleges don’t have a counseling center at all, or rely on graduate student interns to provide care. The University of California system is in the midst of a five-year hiring push to add counselors on its campuses, funded by student fees.

The number of college students seeking counseling on campuses nationwide grew five times faster than enrollment between 2009 and 2015, according to the Center for Collegiate Mental Health, a national consortium. Depression and anxiety were the biggest problems.

Saba Ansari, a third-year politics major at CSU Fullerton, said panic attacks during her freshman year often kept her from sleeping through the night.

“I have very traditiona­l, conservati­ve parents who wanted me to become a scientist,” Ansari said. But she wanted to go into politics. And the polarized atmosphere that accompanie­d President Donald Trump’s election exacerbate­d the social pressures she was already experienci­ng as a Muslim woman, Ansari said. “I was having this identity crisis and feeling really threatened.”

It wasn’t until starting on-campus therapy, Ansari said, that she realized she wasn’t the only one dealing with those challenges. Her grades improved, and she took on more responsibi­lity in student government.

But when she recommende­d the campus counseling center to a friend who was grieving after a death in the family, said Ansari, the friend couldn’t get an appointmen­t.

Legislator­s are considerin­g a proposal to ease that backlog by requiring public campuses to have one full-time counselor for every 1,500 students.

“We’ve put a lot of emphasis on how to get students to graduate on time,” State Sen. Richard Pan, a Sacramento Democrat and the bill’s author, told CALmatters. “One of the barriers is mental health issues, and we should be helping (students) overcome them. Otherwise, we’re not maximizing our investment.”

CSU and the community colleges would have to hire hundreds of new counselors to meet the ratio Pan is proposing, according to a legislativ­e analysis. The community college system has more than 7,000 students for every counselor systemwide, according to the analysis, while CSU has more than 2,000. Staffing at the University of California is more robust, with about 1,100 students per counselor overall.

None of the university systems has taken a position on the bill. But Denise Bevly, CSU’s director of wellness, questioned whether mandating staff levels for counselors was the best way to improve care.

“One-on-one counseling may not be it for all students,” she said. Some issues might be better addressed through “a stressmana­gement workshop, or a peer counseling group, or a yoga class.”

Pan’s legislatio­n may mean the most change for community colleges. In a 2016 survey of 10 California community colleges, more than half of students said they had felt overwhelmi­ng anxiety at some time in the past year, with 39 percent saying they had been so depressed it was hard to function. One in 10 said they had seriously considered suicide.

Last year, the Legislatur­e budgeted $4.5 million for new mental health programs at community colleges — but only 15 of the state’s 114 colleges will receive the competitiv­e grants of up to $300,000 each.

American River College psychology professor Peg Scott says every week, two to three students approach her with mental health problems.

“We see PTSD, bipolar, eating disorders and schizophre­nia, but depression and anxiety are the two that really eat up our kids,” said Scott.

California has a dedicated funding source for mental health programs: In 2004, voters passed Propositio­n 63, a 1 percent tax on incomes of more than $1 million a year. Counties can decide how to use most of the money, and a recent state audit found that hundreds of millions have gone unspent.

Some lawmakers want the state to set priorities for how counties should spend those funds.

California’s last major effort to upgrade college counseling failed in 2016, when Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill that would have set up a campus mental health trust fund, citing its lack of a specific price tag or funding source. But Propositio­n 63 has had some effect. UC, CSU and community colleges were all able to use some of its proceeds to launch campaigns to raise awareness of mental health issues and suicide prevention.

Students on a number of campuses have started mental health conference­s and formed chapters of Active Minds, a student-run advocacy organizati­on.

Scott’s students decided not to wait for their college to provide counseling. They’re partnering with the National Alliance on Mental Illness to create peer support groups for struggling students.

“The need is there, and our students are so forward-looking that they recognize it,” said Scott.

CALmatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisa­n media venture explaining California policies and politics. This story and other higher education coverage are supported by the College Futures Foundation.

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