USA TODAY International Edition

Mental health a priority

- Paul Myerberg

Coming off her gold medal performanc­e at the Beijing Games, 22- year- old snowboarde­r Chloe Kim said this week she plans to take off the 2022- 23 season to focus on her mental health, citing the need to press reset after a “draining year.”

Kim is the latest profession­al athlete to publicly share the impact competitio­n can have on mental wellness and one of several high- profile performers to at least temporaril­y step back from athletic events entirely, including Olympic gymnast Simone Biles, tennis star Naomi Osaka and Olympic swimmer Caeleb Dressel.

Bringing these choices into the public sphere has helped normalize what has long been a taboo topic on all levels of athletics. According to a 2019 study in the journal Sports Medicine, the barriers impeding an open discussion of mental health issues “include more negative attitudes towards help- seeking amongst athletes than the general population, as well as greater stigma and poorer mental health literacy.”

On the college level, conference­s and universiti­es are prioritizi­ng overall health by placing mental well- being on an equal plane with the traditiona­l medical support provided to physical injuries, embracing the concept that conditions related to mental health should be treated with the same focus and care as an ACL tear or concussion.

Concerns over mental wellness has gripped college athletics in recent weeks after the deaths of three female student- athletes by suicide, according to statements from family members and local coroners’ offices.

Stanford soccer player and team captain Katie Meyer, 22, died March 1. Wisconsin track athlete Sarah Shulze, 21, died April 13. On Thursday, the Western Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Virginia ruled the death of James Madison softball payer Lauren Bennett, 20, to be by suicide.

“We have to make it a topic that’s OK to talk about, that’s OK to be able to speak about without any sort of stigma or without any sort of judgment,” Dr. James Borchers, the chief medical officer for the Big Ten and the co- founder and president of the U. S. Council for Athletes’ Health, told USA TODAY Sports.

“Institutio­ns are looking at that, not just with athletes but students in general. In athletics, it’s becoming a much more recognized need for athletes that

are participat­ing.”

Not long after being hired in 2019, Big Ten Commission­er Kevin Warren establishe­d the league’s mental health and wellness cabinet with the goal of “creating and maintainin­g the most comprehens­ive mental health and wellness platform in college athletics,” he said at the time.

Last November, the Big Ten joined the Atlantic Coast and Pac- 12 in establishi­ng an initiative, Teammates for Mental Health, designed to educate coaches and student- athletes on the signs that an individual may be struggling with their mental health.

In terms of creating a public dialogue, these steps and similar programs establishe­d on an individual university level have brought the issue into the mainstream after an extended period of neglect on topics such as anxiety, depression and the sports- school balance for student- athletes.

“I think that in the past, if you go back 20 years and we thought about athletes’ health and safety, we focused a lot on the physical health and safety,” Borchers said. “But this is an area that has definitely come forward as a point of emphasis and point of concern, where in the past it may have been second, third, fourth or even further down the line.”

Mirroring efforts in place on a broader student- body level, many athletic department­s have hired mental health profession­als and devoted resources to

establish programs designed to address the topic of overall well- being.

One such program at Texas Tech places this conversati­on into three buckets. The first establishe­s a primary care integratio­n model across more traditiona­l health services, ensuring that every trainer, team physician or specialty provider in contact with the Red Raiders’ student- athletes is working from the same treatment plans.

The second covers sports psychology, touching on ways student- athletes can weather the ups and downs of competitio­n and schoolwork through increased emotional intelligen­ce. The third involves organizati­onal psychology, or how individual­s in a larger group can work together to reach shared goals.

“Our goal, and we say it time and time again, is to create a sustainabl­e, healthy and high- performing environmen­t, really understand­ing that wellness is the foundation of performanc­e,” said Dr. Tyler Bradstreet, an associate athletic director and the school’s director of clinical and sport psychology.

“Why that’s important is that it gets beyond just providing mental health treatment services on a one- on- one level and really understand­ing all the different things that actually go into and impact someone’s mental health and well- being.”

In addition, nonprofit organizati­ons have filled a void on campuses by connecting directly to student- athletes. One group, Morgan’s Message, was establishe­d in 2020 to honor Morgan Rodgers, a Duke lacrosse player who died by suicide in 2019, and has more than 800 “ambassador­s” at 168 high schools and 226 college campuses covering 35 states, Washington, D. C., and two Canadian provinces.

“For a lot of us, we don’t want anyone else to lose their Morgan,” said co- founder Kat Zempolich, one of Rodgers’ former teammates. “There’s such a stigma surroundin­g mental health, which I think has been the biggest hill to climb. It’s pretty abundantly clear that there’s a need.”

In addition to expanding the conversati­on around mental health struggles, the organizati­on’s message touches on the concept of self- worth – the sense of one’s own intrinsic value beyond external accomplish­ments and successes.

“What we’re trying to preach as a group is that your value doesn’t come from the things you do,” Zempolich said. “Your value isn’t based on how many goals you put in the back of the net or how ( many) minutes you’re on the field. It’s not based on getting an A, getting a B, getting a C. You are valued just being a human being, just being who you are.”

Whether coming from inside an athletic department or from an outside organizati­on, every program devoted to student- athlete mental wellness is aimed at getting out in front of any potential issue. In some cases, that may involve an athlete struggling with the end of his or her playing career or the balance between schoolwork and team work; in others, normalizin­g conversati­ons about mental health may serve as a lifeline to a student- athlete struggling with suicidal thoughts.

“The more we do that, the more our teams do that, the more our coaches feel confident in talking about these things, the more athletes see their teammates talking to us, the more they see us talking to their coaches – it just becomes part of the process,” said Bradstreet.

“We have to have some action around it,” Borchers said. “When I say action, I mean proactive action, not always reactive action. And look, it’s like anything else. We have to do our best job at preparing.”

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.

 ?? COLIN E. BRALEY/ AP ?? James Madison catcher Lauren Bernett played in an NCAA softball game in May 2021.
COLIN E. BRALEY/ AP James Madison catcher Lauren Bernett played in an NCAA softball game in May 2021.
 ?? JUAN CARLO/ THE STAR ?? Sarah Shulze ran track for Oak Park, here winning the CIF Division 3 1,600- meter title.
JUAN CARLO/ THE STAR Sarah Shulze ran track for Oak Park, here winning the CIF Division 3 1,600- meter title.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States