The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

School-based centers play vital role for Hispanic, black students

- By Cara Rosner

Once a week, every week, the health center at Stamford High School offers sophomore Roger Sanchez an oasis — a place where he can talk to a trusted adult about life’s pressures and problems, a place he feels free and unjudged.

School work, sports commitment­s, family and social obligation­s: life as a teenager can be stressful, he says. If it weren’t for the health center, convenient­ly located where he spends most of his days, he would have a much harder time accessing counseling sessions that help him cope with anxiety.

“The health center helps me out academical­ly, emotionall­y and physically,” he said, and he recommends it to friends. “They get nervous, kind of, but I try my best to get them to come in. They never regret it.”

Sanchez, 16, is among a growing number of black and Hispanic teens receiving mental health services at school-based health

centers — services, data show, they’d be much less likely to get or stick with if they pursued them elsewhere in their communitie­s.

“For many students, this is the primary place where they get their care,” said Jesse White-Fresé, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of School Based Health Centers.

For the 2007-08 and 2008-09 school years, 1,130 black and Hispanic males in grades seven through 12 received mental health services, data collected from 75 state-funded health centers show. Those youths registered 15,386 visits over the two-year period, the associatio­n’s issue brief reports.

White-Fresé suspects the number of males served is higher than reported since the data includes only students whose parents agreed to disclose ethnicity during enrollment.

While students seek services for various reasons, research shows black and Hispanic students are more likely than their white peers to experience depression in particular.

In 2015, 36 percent of Hispanic high schools students and 27.3 percent of black students reported feeling so sad or hopeless every day for two or more weeks that they stopped doing some of their usual activities, according to the state Department of Public Health’s 2015 Connecticu­t Youth Risk Behavior Survey. By comparison, 22.6 percent of white students answered the same.

Against that backdrop, just 25.4 percent of all students said they receive the help they need when they feel sad, empty, hopeless, angry or anxious, the survey said.

Statewide there are more than 120 school-based health centers providing medical and mental health services to students, most of which have part of their operating expenses funded by the state.

Centers are often staffed with medical providers who can prescribe medication, and bill Medicaid, HUSKY A and HUSKY B for services. A school nurse can refer a student to a center, but a parent must sign a permission form for their child to receive care.

During the 2007-08 and 2008-09 school years, black and Hispanic students participat­ed in an average of 13.6 therapy sessions, each session lasting 30 to 35 minutes. That same demographi­c typically stops seeing providers in their community after two or three sessions, according to the associatio­n.

“That is quite significan­t,” said Patricia Baker, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Health Foundation, which funded the associatio­n’s study. “Schools are the most common setting in which kids can access mental health care.”

Various factors prevent youths from accessing care in their community, said White-Fresé. It often is difficult to get an appointmen­t outside of school hours, for instance, and lack of transporta­tion can be problemati­c.

“There are some real disparitie­s that are happening but in this (school) setting those disparitie­s are reduced,” she added.

If he couldn’t receive services in school, Sanchez says, it would be difficult to fit therapy sessions around school, sports and church obligation­s. He began accessing services in seventh grade at his middle school. At Stamford High School’s center, he has a standing weekly appointmen­t with social worker Emily Segal and can often get a sameday appointmen­t if an emergency arises.

“It makes life easier for me,” he said.

Segal has been working at the center, run by nonprofit Family Centers, for 17 years and sees a growing number of students seeking help for anxiety.

“There’s a lot of stress on these students,” she said. “It’s a tense, stressful time.”

Segal is a valuable resource “when you need someone to talk to,” said Berwens Desgazon, 15, a sophomore who receives mental health services. “If you have an emergency, you can just walk a couple of steps to get help.”

Desgazon has had weekly one-on-one sessions with Segal since last year. He says the center is a place he feels comfortabl­e and safe discussing what’s happening in his life.

At Windham High School, which has a health center, wellness center therapist Carolyn Franzen says being in the school helps her bond with students.

“I’m part of their world,” she said. “They’re going to see me every day; they’re going to see me in the halls. I know their friends. It’s very different than leaving and driving to somebody’s office to get help.”

Windham High School’s student population is 70 percent Hispanic, she said, and roughly 90 percent of the school’s total population is enrolled in the center, which is affiliated with Windham Hospital.

In addition to the one-onone counseling available at many centers, some offer group therapy as part of the Cognitive Behavioral Interventi­on for Trauma in Schools program. That national initiative launched in Connecticu­t in 2014 and most students who participat­e are black or Hispanic, according to Jason Lang, vice president for mental health initiative­s at the Child Health and Developmen­t Institute, which trains mental health service providers.

About 50 Connecticu­t schools use the program, some of which offer the service at school-based health centers. Geared toward students who have experience­d trauma, the program includes 10 group sessions. Statewide, 70 percent of participan­ts are Hispanic, 20 percent are black and less than 10 percent are white, Lang said. Roughly half are males, he added.

“The group setting has benefits because children hear from their peers who have experience­d similar things,” he said. “One of the challenges with trauma is that, because people tend not to talk about these things, people tend to think they’re alone and they’re the only ones who have experience­d it.”

Leaving mental health issues untreated can have serious consequenc­es, including truancy, involvemen­t in the juvenile justice system, school suspension­s, and aggressive incidents, a study by the Center for Children’s Advocacy at the UConn School of Law found.

Funding uncertaint­y nearly jeopardize­d the strides centers have made, Baker said.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s initial proposal appropriat­ed $9.97 million to schoolbase­d health centers in the 2019 fiscal year, nearly a 10 percent reduction from what previously had been budgeted for 2019 and at least the third consecutiv­e year in which state funding has been reduced.

The budget that was passed May 9 allocates $10.7 million to the centers for 2019. While that is a decrease from the $11 million originally slated for the centers in the Democratic budget proposal, it was not quite as severe as the funding cut in the governor’s proposed budget, according to White-Fresé.

“They’ve been experienci­ng cuts—a little here, a little there,” Baker said. “Connecticu­t’s done a great job about school-based health centers, but we’re now at the point where tough (budget) decisions are being made.”

 ?? Carl Jordan Castro / For Connecticu­t Health I-Team ?? Emily Segal is a senior social worker at Family Centers’ school-based health center at Stamford High School.
Carl Jordan Castro / For Connecticu­t Health I-Team Emily Segal is a senior social worker at Family Centers’ school-based health center at Stamford High School.
 ?? Carl Jordan Castro / For Connecticu­tHealth I-Team ?? The entrance to Stamford High School’s health clinic. The clinic has seen up to 40 students a day with problems that include physical, mental and emotional issues.
Carl Jordan Castro / For Connecticu­tHealth I-Team The entrance to Stamford High School’s health clinic. The clinic has seen up to 40 students a day with problems that include physical, mental and emotional issues.

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