Webinar: Community College Mental Health: Latest Findings in Prevalence and Intervention

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Webinar Slides: Preliminary findings from top mental health and intervention science researchers on how community college students are faring in terms of their mental wellness versus their 4-year college peers and what the nation’s largest system of community colleges has been doing to support over 2 million students.

Transcript of Webinar: Community College Mental Health: Latest Findings in Prevalence and Intervention

Community College Mental Health – Latest

Findings in Prevalence and Intervention

Sarah Ketchen Lipson, M.Ed., Assistant Dir., Healthy Minds Network

William Zywiak, Ph.D., Assistant Dir. and Research Scientist, PIRE's Decision

Sciences Institute

Speakers

Agenda

Sarah Ketchen Lipson – Community College Mental Health

Lisa Tannenbaum – Kognito Learning Experiences in California Community Colleges

William Zywiak – Initial Findings – Evaluation of Kognito Learning Experiences at California Community Colleges

Q & A

Community College Student Mental

Health:Findings from the Healthy Minds Network

October 2014 | Presented by Sarah Ketchen LipsonAssistant Director, the Healthy Minds Network

What is the Healthy Minds Network?

www.healthymindsnetwork.org

Building a collaborative, international network

(1) produce knowledge (research)

(2) distribute knowledge (dissemination)

(3) use knowledge (practice)

Research

Online survey studies

Intervention studies

Dissemination

Data reports, data sets

Research briefs, webinars

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Prior Research on Community College Student Mental Health

� Little known about the mental health of community college students

� Lack of mental health resources (Wood, 2012)

� Top concerns of students (Gallagher, 2012)

� Depression

� Anxiety disorders

� Stress

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Wood, M. (2012). The State of Mental Health on College Campuses. Inquiry (Journal of the Virginia Community Colleges), 17(1), 5-15.

Gallagher, R.P. (2012). National Survey of Counseling Center Directors. Alexandria, VA: International Association of CounselingServices.

Healthy Minds Study (HMS)

About HMS

� Began in 2005

� Fielded at >100 four-year campuses

� >100,000 survey respondents to date

Main Measures

� Mental health (depression, anxiety, self-injury, suicidality, positive mental health)

� Health behaviors (e.g., substance use, exercise, sleep)

� Attitudes and knowledge about services

� Service use

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HMS at Community Colleges

Winter/spring 2014

� Beginning of focus on community colleges (CCs)

� Funding from University of Michigan and NEOMED (Ohio)

� Today: data from 3 CCs in Ohio

Academic year 2014-2015

� Consortium of ~20 CCs

� Currently recruiting for a handful of additional campuses=free

opportunity to participate!

� Funding: SingleStop USA, University of Wisconsin (Professor Sara Goldrick-Rab), Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT)

� Modified survey to focus on low-income students

� Housing and food insecurity, use of public services

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About Today’s Data

� 2014 CC data

3 CCs in Ohio

Invited sample=9,121

Survey completers=1,419 students

Overall response rate=15.6%

� Comparison data from 2013 four-year schools

16 schools

Invited sample=59,162

Survey completers=17,563 students

Overall response rate=29.7%

� Adjusted for non-response bias

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Sample Characteristics

2013 Four-Year Institutions

(N=17,563)

Age (18-22) 74.6%

Female 53.0%

White 72.2%

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2014 Community Colleges

(N=1,419)

Age (18-22) 41.2%

Female 47.3%

White 80.7%

Prevalence of Mental Health Problems

CC Student Perspectives [1]

� “I feel anxious a lot due to the pressure and amount of school work…finding time to do

the work and stay afloat financially is a

burden!...I do sometimes feel so overwhelmed, stressed, and anxious, and sometimes sad…It becomes emotionally overwhelming at times and I lose motivation to do school work the next day and will procrastinate and take naps because I’m mentally drained”

� “I am now at a level of depression that I

have isolated myself from most people. If I could afford to stay home and not work I prefer to do it but financially I have to work since I am sole provider for my two kids…”

CC Student Perspectives [2]

� “School can be very stressful on students. Especially those (including myself) who have to work 45 hours a

week, have a child at home, and still

go to school 4 nights a week. Time management is very important.”

� “This year our house was foreclosed

on and we have been looking for a

new place, this is a very emotional time, but I am not depressed, because I do believe the living arrangements will work out.”

Substance Use

Therapy among Students with Apparent Need

Medication among Students with Apparent Need

Any Treatment among Students with Apparent Need

52.9% of CC students report receiving informal counseling/support for mental and emotional health (e.g., from friends/family).

Any Treatment among Students with Apparent Need (ages 18-22)

Knowledge of Campus MH Services is Comparatively Low

� “This [survey] inspired me to seek information at my campus regarding mental health.”

� “Mental health is a troubling subject for many more students than it appears. Addressing the problem correctly would require more than access to counseling, but the introduction of acceptance and understanding from the staff.”

Stigma is Relatively Low (…willingly accept someone

who has received mental health treatment as a close friend.)

Treatment Barriers among CC Students with Apparent Need

Only 15.3% of CC students report having no health insurance. 59.7% of students report that their health insurance would cover mental health

treatment.

Next Steps for HMN’S CC Research

� Applying these findings in practice

Quantify problems, identify opportunities

Evaluate programs

Advocate for resources (and establish economic case)

� Modified HMS survey at ~20 schools in academic year 2014-2015

� Examine links between mental health and:

Food/housing insecurity

Financial stress in general

Use of supportive services and benefits

Academic outcomes

� Intervention research

Participation ProcessResearch Study Coordinator

Mira Dalal: healthyminds@umich.edu

Enrollment steps

� Sign participation contract

� Complete data agreement

� Send a file of students for survey recruitment

� Customize the survey with local resources and additional questions

� Submit payment ($500)

Free participation opportunity with SingleStop USA/ACCT HMS

� Looking for a handful more CCs (email healthyminds@umich.edu)

IRB requirements

Attain IRB approval or exemption (main IRB at University of Michigan does not consider other campuses “engaged” in the research; letter available upon request)

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Uses of Research/Data

� To assess need in the student population

� To raise awareness

� To strengthen grant applications

� To advocate for mental health services and programs on campus

� To evaluate existing programs

� To make comparisons with peer institutions

� Economic case for mental health services (link to academic records)

Research-to-Practice

Our goal is to conduct research that can directly inform practice.

Mechanisms for achieving this aim:� Customized data reports www.healthymindsnetwork.org/for-schools/data-reports� Link between mental health and academic performance� Data sets and statistical support� Interactive data interface

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Interactive Data Interface

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The interactive data interface securely contains de-identified survey data

and is available to all participating schools.

Using a simple drop-down menu, the data interface allows users to:

� Auto-generate graphs/tables for reports, presentations, meetings

� Compare sub-groups of interest

� e.g., depression among female vs. male students

� Compare with peer institutions

� data.healthymindsnetwork.org

Interactive Data Interface

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Interactive Data Interface

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Join HMN’s Growing Network

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Kognito Learning Experiences

for Faculty & Staff

At-Risk Veterans on CampusLGBTQ on Campus

for Students

At-Risk Engages campus community in student mental health

• Learn to identify, approach, and refer (when necessary) at-risk students

• Gain confidence to discuss psychological distress

• Motivate the student to seek help

• Access campus specific procedures and local resources

LGBTQ on Campus creates welcoming, safer campuses for LGBTQ students

• Increase empathy and awareness of the challenges faced by LGBTQ students

• Practice managing discussions:• create a supportive and respectful environment on

campus• deal with situations such as coming out and

gender identifying information• recognize signs of psychological distress• motivate student to seek help, if needed

• Communicate campus procedures and how to refer appropriate local mental health and campus services

Veterans on Campus engages campus community to foster student veteran success

• Build military cultural competency

• Ease the transition to college life

• Build a support system for student veterans

• Learn how to handle thoughts of dropping out or suicide

• Learn how to refer to appropriate resources on or off campus, including the VA

Preliminary Results from PIRE’s Evaluation of Kognito trainings in California Community Colleges

Presented by William Zywiak Ph.D., Assistant Director PIRE's Decision

Sciences Institute

• Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation (PIRE):

– Founded in 1974, in Berkeley, CA

– MISSION: to promote, undertake, and evaluate activities, studies, and programs that improve individual and public health, welfare, and safety. In support of this mission, we create and support an environment within which skilled, innovative, and dedicated researchers and practitioners work to extend the leading edges of their respective fields.

About PIRE

Research team

William Zywiak, PhD has been the PIRE liaison to Kognito since August 2012.

Research Scientist with PIRE since 1999.Associate Professor (Adjunct), DPHB and CAAS, Brown University

Other PIRE staff on this evaluation: • Bob Saltz, Oakland, CA• Rick McGaffigan, San Diego, CA• Alan Stein Seroussi, Chapel Hill, NC • Kathy Atwood and David Collins, Louisville, KY

Usage

SimulationFor Faculty

& Staff

For

Student

Leaders

At-Risk 3,074 8,543

Veterans on

Campus1,597 1,169

LGBTQ on

Campus704 1,495

Total 5,375 11,207

Colleges

that

trained...

0 to 49

Fac/Staff

50+

Fac/Staff

0 to 49 Students

73 (65%) 8 (7%)

50+ Student 8 (7%) 23 (21%)

Increases in Referral rates

Pre Follow-Up

M (SD) M SD) Faculty/Staff/Admin 1.47 (2.45) 1.49 (2.13)

p n.s. No change

Students 0.70 (1.60) 1.23 (1.93)

p < .001 76% increase

t(408) = 3.53,

p < .001

���� Referrals increase if students are trained, but CC students are likely to leave campus after 1 or 2 years, so training should be promoted every year or every other year.

For everyone who completed Kognito At-Risk Training

Increases in Referral rates

After completing Kognito At-Risk Training, for those making 0 or 1 referrals* at the pre test

Pre Follow-Up

M (SD) M (SD) Faculty/Staff/Admin 0.30 (0.46) 0.81 (1.32)

p < .001 2.7 times as much

Students 0.24 (0.43) 0.84 (1.49)

p < .001 3.5 times as much

*to filter out those actively referring students already.

71% of faculty/staff

How did you hear about this course?

Referral Rate Increase (Students)

For Students n M SD

Administrator/faculty email 77 0.47 2.06

Counseling Center 22 0.91 2.07

Poster 5 0.20 0.45

Friend (word of mouth) 7 0.29 0.95

Flyer 12 1.08 2.61

Other 53 0.55 1.34

How did you hear about this course?Referral Rate Increase (Faculty/Staff)

For Faculty/Staff n M SDAdministrator/Staff email 186 -0.10 1.78Flyer in my mailbox 12 0.17 0.72Poster in the school 4 -0.25 1.26Colleague 53 -0.23 2.53Other 30 0.67 2.07

Other: Faculty Development (FLEX) Workshop and the CCC SMHP grant were themes among the ‘other’ responses

What Predicts an Increase in Faculty/Staff Referrals?

Their rating of:

- Institutional Understanding of Causes of Psychological Stress, Consequences,

and Impact

- Campus Climate for women students

- Campus Climate for racial/ethnic minority students

Results suggest a potential synergy between top down approaches and bottom up approaches: organizational measures and student / grass roots efforts.

What Predicts an Increase in Student Referrals?

“Are you a Peer Counselor or Student Leader?”

M (SD) nYes 1.11 (2.65) 37No 0.35 (1.43) 116

t(42.4) = 1.67, p = .10

Several variables did not differentiate referral rate increases, suggesting that the effect of these simulations generalize across different groups.

Conclusions

Evidence suggests that these simulations:

• boost referral rates in Faculty/Staff not already making referrals

• boost referral rates among students in general

• may be most effective if the training is contextualized

Q&A

Sarah Ketchen Lipson,

M.Ed., Assistant Dir.,

Healthy Minds Network

sklipson@umich.edu

William Zywiak, Ph.D., Assistant

Dir. and Research Scientist,

PIRE's Decision Sciences Institute

zywiak@pire.org

Lisa Tannenbaum

Kognito

lisa@kognito.com