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ResearchReport
LISASONTAG-PADILLA,DENISEWILLIAMS,HOLLYKOSIEWICZ,LINDSAYDAUGHERTY,HEIDIKANE,SARAHGRIPSHOVER,TREYMILLER
Supportingthe
MentalHealthNeeds
ofCommunity
CollegeStudents
SupportedbytheInstituteofEducationSciencesandtheTrellisFoundation
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/t/RRA2552-1
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AboutThisReport
iii
TheUnitedStatesfacesanunprecedentedmentalhealthcrisis,withyouthandyoungadultsatthecenter(U.S.DepartmentofHealthandHumanServices,OfficeoftheU.S.Surgeon
General,2021;WhiteHouse,2022).Evenbeforethecoronavirusdisease2019(COVID-19)
pandemic,nearly50percentofcollegestudentsreportedatleastonementalhealthconcern.TheCOVID-19pandemicnotablyexacerbatedtheseissuesandunderscoredtheurgentneedto
identifyandimplementsolutionstoamelioratetheyouthmentalhealthcrisis.In2021,the
NationalAcademiesofSciences,Engineering,andMedicine(NASEM)calledonthefieldof
highereducationtoaddressgrowingconcernsaboutstudentmentalhealthbyidentifyingand
elevatingemergingandpromisingapproachesthatofferamoreholisticwaytosupportstudentmentalhealthinhighereducation(NASEM,2021).Servingasthemainentrypointformore
than40percentofstudentsseekingapostsecondaryeducationdegree,communitycolleges
representatremendousanduntappedopportunitytobetteraddressmentalhealthintheUnited
States,particularlyforstudentswhohavebeentraditionallyunderserved(e.g.,studentsofcolor,first-generationstudents,andlow-incomestudents).However,thereislimitedevidenceand
guidancethatcollegescanusetoinformtheimplementationofmultilevel,holisticapproachestosupportstudentswithvaryingmentalhealthneeds.
Toaddressthisknowledgegap,thisreportsharesadescriptivestudyofeightcommunitycollegesattheforefrontofimplementingmultilevelapproaches(i.e.,acombinationof
prevention,earlyintervention,and/ortreatmentservices)tosupportstudentmentalhealth,andkeyfacilitatorsforandbarrierstotheirsuccess.
RANDEducationandLabor
ThisstudywasundertakenbyRANDEducationandLabor,adivisionoftheRAND
Corporationthatconductsresearchonearlychildhoodthroughpostsecondaryeducation
programs,workforcedevelopment,andprogramsandpoliciesaffectingworkers,
entrepreneurship,andfinancialliteracyanddecisionmaking.Theresearchreportedherewas
supportedbytheInstituteofEducationSciences(IES)(U.S.DepartmentofEducation)throughIESsupplementalfundsprovidedthroughtheCollegeCompletionNetwork($99,988.27)underthegrantR305H170085toAIRandbytheTrellisFoundationthroughagranttotheUniversityofTexas,Dallas(subawardtoRANDof$54,543.00tosupportreportdevelopmentand
dissemination).TheresearchteamrepresentedapartnershipamongAIR,theRAND
Corporation,theUniversityofTexasatDallas,StanfordUniversity,ActiveMinds,andtheJed
iv
Foundation(JED).RANDEducationandLaborservedastheleaddivisionforthestudyandreport.1
Theopinionsexpressedinthisreportaretheauthors’aloneanddonotrepresenttheviewsoftheInstituteofEducationSciencesortheTrellisFoundation.MoreinformationaboutRANDcanbefoundat
.QuestionsaboutthisreportshouldbedirectedtoLisaPadillaat
lsontag@,
andquestionsaboutRANDEducationandLaborshouldbedirectedto
educationandlabor@.
RANDHealthCare
RANDHealthCare,adivisionoftheRANDCorporation,promoteshealthiersocietiesby
improvinghealthcaresystemsintheUnitedStatesandothercountries.Wedothisbyprovidinghealthcaredecisionmakers,practitioners,andconsumerswithactionable,rigorous,objective
evidencetosupporttheirmostcomplexdecisions.Formoreinformation,see
/health-care
.
SocialandBehavioralPolicyProgram
RANDSocialandEconomicWell-BeingisadivisionoftheRANDCorporationthatseekstoactivelyimprovethehealthandsocialandeconomicwell-beingofpopulationsandcommunitiesthroughouttheworld.ThisresearchwasconductedintheSocialandBehavioralPolicyProgramwithinRANDSocialandEconomicWell-Being.Theprogramfocusesonsuchtopicsasrisk
factorsandpreventionprograms,socialsafetynetprogramsandothersocialsupports,poverty,aging,disability,childandyouthhealthandwell-being,andqualityoflife,aswellasother
policyconcernsthatareinfluencedbysocialandbehavioralactionsandsystemsthataffectwell-being.Formoreinformation,email
sbp@
.
Acknowledgments
ThisstudywouldnothavebeenpossiblewithoutclosecollaborationfromSaraGormanandherteamattheJedFoundationandLauraHorneandherteamatActiveMinds;fromoursenior
advisers,DanielEisenbergandWendyReinke;fromtheCollegeCompletionNetworkLead
teamandprogramofficer,JamesBenson;andfromRANDsupportstaffandpublishingstaff.Wearealsogratefulforthevaluablefeedbackonthereportthatwereceivedfromourpeer
reviewers,MichaelDunbarandSaraAbelson.Finally,wewouldliketothankourfunders,the
1Authoraffiliationsareasfollows:LisaSontag-Padilla(RANDCorporation);DeniseWilliams,HollyKosiewicz,andHeidiKane(UniversityofTexas,Dallas);SarahGripshover(StanfordUniversity);andTreyMiller(AIRandUniversityofTexas,Dallas).
v
U.S.DepartmentofEducation’sInstituteofEducationSciencesandtheTrellisFoundation,fortheirsupportofthisresearchandreportdevelopment.
Summary
vi
TheUnitedStatesfacesanunprecedentedmentalhealthcrisis,withyouthandyoungadults
atthecenter(U.S.DepartmentofHealthandHumanServices,OfficeoftheU.S.Surgeon
General,2021;WhiteHouse,2022).Evenbeforethecoronavirusdisease2019(COVID-19)
pandemic,nearly50percentofcollegestudentsreportedatleastonementalhealthconcern.
Withoutpropersupport,collegestudentsareatriskforavarietyofbothimmediateconsequences(e.g.,academicimpairment,substanceuse,suicide)andlonger-termones(e.g.,stop-out,drop-
out,andlowerlifetimeearningpotential).TheCOVID-19pandemicnotablyexacerbatedthese
issuesandunderscoredtheurgencytoidentifyandimplementsolutionstoamelioratetheyouth
mentalhealthcrisis.In2021,theNationalAcademiesofSciences,Engineering,andMedicine
(NASEM)calledonthefieldofhighereducationtoaddressgrowingconcernsaboutstudent
mentalhealthbyidentifyingandelevatingemergingandpromisingapproachesthatofferamoreholisticwaytosupportstudentmentalhealthinhighereducation(NASEM,2021).Servingasthemainentrypointformorethan40percentofstudentsseekingapostsecondaryeducationdegree,communitycollegesrepresentatremendous,untappedopportunitytobetteraddressmental
healthintheUnitedStates,particularlyforstudentswhohavebeentraditionallyunderserved
(e.g.,studentsofcolor,first-generationstudents,andlow-incomestudents).However,thereislimitedevidenceandguidancethatcollegescanusetoinformtheimplementationofmultilevel,holisticapproachestosupportstudentswithvaryingmentalhealthneeds.
Toaddressthisknowledgegap,weexaminedqualitativedatafromeightcommunitycollegesattheforefrontofimplementingmultilevelapproaches(i.e.,acombinationofprevention,earlyintervention,and/ortreatmentservices)tosupportstudentmentalhealth.Specifically,thestudywasdesignedtodothefollowing:
1.describecommunitycollegeeffortstosupportmentalhealthonacontinuumofcarefrompreventiontotreatment
2.describehowthesecollegesareaddressingstudentmentalhealththroughthebroadercollegeenvironment
3.identifychallengesandfacilitatorsthatthesecommunitycollegesencounteredinaddressingstudentmentalhealth.
Methods
IncollaborationwithActiveMindsandtheJedFoundation,weidentifiedandrecruited
communitycollegesthatrepresentedaselectgroupthatwaslikely“aheadofthecurve”on
implementingmultilevelandholisticstrategiestosupportstudentmentalhealth.Inaddition,weselectedcollegesthatrepresentgeographicdiversityacrosstheUnitedStatesandservelarge
proportionsofstudentsofcolororlow-incomestudents.BetweenFebruaryandJuly2022,we
vii
conductedinterviewswithrepresentativesfromeachoftheeightcolleges(15interviewswith28
individuals,consistingof19mentalhealthcounselorsorimplementersofmentalhealth
programsandnineadministrators).Weanalyzedtheinterviewdatausingacombinationofdeductiveapproaches(comparingdataagainstfindingsfromtheexistingresearchbaseandinsightsfrommentalhealthexperts)andinductiveones(identifyingthemesandpatternsthatcouldnotbecategorizedbyaprioriknowledge).
LessonsLearnedandImplications
Ourfindingsfromtheseeightcollegeshighlightasetoflessonsforcommunitycollegesacrossthecountrytoconsiderwhenstrategizinghowbesttosupportstudentmentalhealth.Below,wehighlightfivekeylessonsandtheirassociatedimplicationsforeducational
institutions,practitioners,andpolicymakers.
Lesson1:Communitycollegesinourstudyareimplementingmultilevelmentalhealthsupports,thoughmostlackaclearorganizingframework.Wefoundthatcolleges
implementedawidevarietyofeffortstosupportstudentmentalhealthacrossthespectrumfromwell-beingtoillness.Theseeffortsincludedstudent-centricprograms(e.g.,stressreduction
seminarsoreducatingstudentsonavailableresources),faculty/stafffocusedefforts(e.g.,
gatekeepertrainingoreducatingstaffonthelinkbetweenmentalhealthandacademicsuccess),andinstitution-wideefforts(e.g.,formingmentalhealthtaskforcestodrivestrategiestosupportstudentmentalhealth).Yetmostcollegesdidnothaveaclearinstitutionalvisionorstrategic
planforhowmentalhealthsupportscouldbecoordinatedanddelivered.
.Implications:Communitycollegesshouldconsideradoptingandformalizingastrategicplanorframeworkgroundedinresearchevidencetoimprovecoordinationand
collaborationacrossefforts,reduceredundancies,andguidedecisionmakingon
allocatingresources.Suchaframeworkalsocouldcreateacommonlanguageamongpostsecondaryinstitutions,whichincreasesthelikelihoodthatcollegescanmoreeasilylearnfromeachothertoscalepromisingpracticestosupportstudentmentalhealth.
Lesson2:Communitycollegeshaveexpandedthereachoftheirmentalhealthsupportsthroughintegrationinthebroadercollegeenvironment.Allparticipatingcolleges
highlightedtheimportanceofconsideringthewholecollegeenvironmentandtheneedtodeeplyintegratementalhealthsupportsandserviceswithothercollegeactivities.Theseeffortsincluded(1)enhancingacademicenvironments,suchasintegratinginformationonmentalhealth
resourcesintocoursesyllabiorlessons,(2)staffeducationontheimportanceofstudentmentalhealthandwhattodowheninteractingwithadistressedstudent,(3)colocationofmentalhealthandacademicorbasicneedsandservices,(4)theestablishmentofcross-disciplinarytaskforces,and(5)moreexplicitreferralandscreeningprocessesandsupportsbetweeninstructors,
academiccounselors,andmentalhealthcounselingstaff.Participantsfromthosecollegesusing
viii
severaloftheseapproachessharedstoriesofsuccessinsupportingabroaderbaseofstudentsandfosteringasupportivecampusclimate.
.Implications:Consideringmajorstridesinsupportingstudentmentalhealth,communitycollegesshouldcontinuetointegratementalhealthsupportsintothebroadercollege
environment(i.e.,classrooms,academicadvising,basicneedssupport,financial
assistance).Inaddition,collegesmaybenefitfromidentifyingandpubliclypromoting
studentmentalhealthasacampus-widepriority.Together,theseeffortshavethe
potentialtodemonstratetostudents,faculty,andstafftheinstitution’scommitmentto
studentmentalhealthand,inturn,tohelpfosterasupportivecampusenvironmentforall.
Lesson3:Strongleadershipsupportandbroadbuy-infromstafftoprioritizestudent
mentalhealthisimportant.Supportfromleadership(e.g.,presidents,vicepresidents,deans)
andbroadbuy-infromfacultyandstafftoprioritizeandsupportstudentmentalhealthwerekeyfacilitatorsforestablishingarobustsetofmentalhealthsupportsforcollegesinthisstudy.
Havingthepresident,deans,andotherleadershiprolesprioritizeandelevatetheimportanceofstudentmentalhealthwasreportedaskeytoincreasedfinancialsupportforprograms,
institutionalizationofmentalhealthcounselorpositions,andenhancedparticipationfromfacultyandstaffineducationseminars,gatekeepertrainings,andintegrationofmentalhealthsupportsintotheclassroomenvironment.However,manyparticipantsnotedthatfacultyandstaffoutsidefieldsrelatedtomentalhealth(e.g.,psychology,socialwork,nursing)havenotwidelyadoptedtheideathatsupportingmentalhealthispartoftheirroleineducatingstudents.
.Implications:Institutionalleaders(e.g.,presidents,deans,departmentchairs)mayneedtodomoretoelevateinstitutionalprioritiesaroundmentalhealth.Forinstance,
institutionalleadersfromallsegmentsofthecollege(e.g.,president,boardoftrusteesorregents,deans)shouldconsidercommunicatingpubliclytheimportanceofcreatinga
cultureofwell-beingoncampus.Additionally,institutionscouldestablishand/or
maintainateamthatinvolvesallsectorsofthecollegethatcoordinates,reviews,and
addressesmentalhealth,substanceuse,andwell-beingconcernsandefforts.Those
collegesthatreceivedsupportfromleadershiporestablishedsimilarcross-disciplinetaskforcessaidthatthesefactorswerecentraltotheirsuccessineffectivelyaddressing
studentmentalhealth.
Lesson4:Communitycollegesstruggletomeetstudents’mentalhealthneedsbecause
oflimitedresources.Atmostoftheparticipatingcolleges,mentalhealthcounselorsworemanyhats,jugglingdeliveryofcounselingservices,supportgroupsforstudents,staffeducation,and
orientationweeksessionsonmentalhealth.Thoughavarietyoffactorsareatplay(e.g.,
leadershipsupport,limitedfinancialresources),limitedstaffcapacityto“doitall”emergedasaprimarychallengetomeetingtheincreasingdemandformentalhealthservicesandprograms
designedtobolsterafoundationofmentalwell-being.Additionally,despitetheuseofavarietyofapproachestoexpandaccesstomentalhealthservices(e.g.,useoftelehealth,grantfundingtohiremorecounselors,community-basedpartnerships),manyparticipantsexpressedchallengesin
ix
reachingtraditionallymarginalizedandminoritizedpopulationswhomayneedadditionalsupport.
.Implications:Toaddressthesechallenges,communitycollegesshouldconsider
reallocatingexistingfinancialresourcesorseekingopportunitiesforadditionalfinancialresourcestoincreasecapacitytodeliversufficientstudentmentalhealthsupportsand
services.Inadditiontoinstitutionalfunding,counselingcentersandstudentsuccessstaffshouldcontinuetothinkcreativelyabouthowtoreachstudentswhoneedthemmostandrootdecisionsaboutprogramsandengagementindataontheirtargetpopulations.To
helpstreamlineprocessesandalleviatesomeoftheburdensencounteredbymentalhealthcounselors,communitycollegesshouldconsiderconductinganauditorneedsassessmentofcurrenteffortstoreduceredundancyacrossprogramswhilesimultaneouslyimprovingintegrationofsupports,elevateeffortsthathavebeenmostsuccessfulatreaching
students,andidentifykeyareasforopportunitytobetterengageandsupportstudentsmostatrisk(e.g.,studentsofcolor,queerstudents,first-generationstudents,andlow-incomestudents).
Lesson5:Financialsupportforstudentmentalhealthshouldextendbeyondthe
postsecondaryinstitutions.Communitycollegesstruggletofindfinancialresourcestosupporttheirefforts(evenamongasampleofcommunitycollegeslikelyaheadofthecurveon
addressingstudentmentalhealth).Participantsfromafewcollegessharedsuccessesinobtaininggrantfundingfromlocal,state,andfederalagenciesthathaveearmarkeddollarstosupport
mentalhealthandpostsecondarystudentsuccessefforts.Althoughtheseresourcesarehelpful,theydidnotappearsufficienttomeetthecapacityandfinancialneedsofthecollegesto
adequatelysupporttheirstudents’mentalhealth;asaresult,thisresponsibilitytomaintainaconstantflowofgrantdollarsplacesatremendousburdenoncounselingandstudentsuccessstaff.
.Implications:RecognizingthattheU.S.highereducationenterpriseisundertremendousfinancialstress,findingnewfundstoprovideadditionalresourcesforstudents
experiencingmentalhealthproblemsmayprovetobechallenging.Nonetheless,
establishingconsistent,long-termfundingsourcestosupportcommunitycollegesmaybenecessarytocreatesustainable,comprehensivementalhealthsupportsforstudents.
Governmentagenciesandphilanthropicentitiesshouldconsiderincreasingthepriority
giventofundingmentalhealthsupportsandservicesoncommunitycollegecampuses.
Additionally,national,state,andlocalfundersofhighereducationshouldconsider
incentivizingcommunitycollegestoprovidesupportforstudents’mentalhealthacross
thecontinuumofcare(preventionthroughtreatment).Finally,statesshouldconsider
modifyinginsurancelawsorregulationstoenableinstitutionstousegeneralfundsand/ordesignatedhealthfeesforexpensesthatarenotcoveredbystudents’personalinsurance.
Contents
x
AboutThisReport iii
Summary vi
FiguresandTables xi
Chapter1.Introduction
1
Chapter2.EvidenceandFrameworksforSupportingStudentMentalHealthinCommunity
CollegeSettings
4
FrameworksforSupportingStudentMentalHealth
5
EvidenceonApproachestoSupportingStudentMentalHealth
8
ContributionsoftheCurrentStudy
9
Chapter3.Methods
11
DataCollection
11
AnalyticApproach
15
Chapter4.Results
17
ApproachestoSupportingStudentMentalHealth
17
IntegratingMentalHealthSupportintotheCollegeEnvironment
23
BarrierstoandFacilitatorsforSupportingStudentMentalHealth
27
SummaryofFindings
29
Chapter5.LessonsLearnedandImplications
31
Lesson1:CommunityCollegesAreImplementingMultilevelMentalHealthSupports,ThoughMost
LackaClearOrganizingFramework
31
Lesson2:CommunityCollegesHaveExpandedTheirReachofMentalHealthSupportsThrough
IntegrationintheBroaderCollegeEnvironment
33
Lesson3:StrongLeadershipSupportandBroadBuy-InfromStafftoPrioritizeStudentMentalIs
Important
34
Lesson4:CommunityCollegesStruggletoMeetStudents’MentalHealthNeedsBecauseofLimited
Resources
35
Lesson5:FinancialSupportforStudentMentalHealthShouldExtendBeyondPostsecondary
Institutions
36
Considerations
37
Conclusions
38
AppendixA.Pre-InterviewSurvey
39
AppendixB.SemistructuredInterview
44
Abbreviations
48
References
49
FiguresandTables
xi
Figures
Figure2.1.PublicHealthPreventionFramework
6
Figure2.2.EcologicalSystemsTheoryforCollegeMentalHealth
7
Tables
Table3.1.CharacteristicsofParticipatingCollegesandMentalHealthSupportsOffered
14
Table4.1.CommunityCollegesReportingEffortstoPromoteOverallStudentMental
Health
18
Table4.2.CommunityCollegesReportingEffortstoSupportHighRiskStudents
20
Chapter1.Introduction
1
TheUnitedStatesfacesanunprecedentedmentalhealthcrisis,withyouthandyoungadultsatthecenter(U.S.DepartmentofHealthandHumanServices,OfficeoftheU.S.Surgeon
General,2021;WhiteHouse,2022).Evenbeforethecoronavirusdisease2019(COVID-19)
pandemic,researchindicatedariseinthepercentageofcollegestudentsreportingfeelingsof
hopelessness(53percentofundergraduatestudentsin2017,upfrom47percentin2008),feelingsodepressedthatitwasdifficulttofunction(40percentin2017,upfrom31percentin2008)
andseriouslyconsideringsuicideinthepast12months(12percentin2017,upfrom6percentin2008)(AmericanCollegeHealthAssociation,2008;AmericanCollegeHealthAssociation,
2017).2TheCOVID-19pandemicnotablyexacerbatedthenumberofstudentsreportingmentalhealthchallenges(Czeisleretal.,2020;Ezarik,2021;McGintyetal.,2020;TimelyMD,2020).Withouttreatment,theconsequencesofmentalillnessfortheindividualandsocietyare
staggering,withuntreatedmentalhealthdisordersassociatedwithlowerpersistenceandcollegecompletionrates,higherratesofsubstanceuse,andlowerlifetimeearningpotential.Mental
illnessisalsoreportedtobetheleadingcauseofdisabilityandlostworkplaceproductivity
(Alonsoetal.,2018;Arriaetal.,2013;Breslauetal.,2008;Bruffaertsetal.,2018;CollinsandMowbray,2005;Drussetal.,2009;Keyesetal.,2012).
In2021,theU.S.SurgeonGeneralissuedanadvisoryunderscoringtheurgentneedto
identifyandimplementsolutionstoaddresstheyouthmentalhealthcrisis,particularlyforracialandethnicminorities,LGBTQ+(lesbian,gay,bisexual,transgender,queer,and/orplus)youth,andlow-incomeyouthwhoareatincreasedriskformentalhealthchallenges(U.S.DepartmentofHealthandHumanServices,OfficeoftheU.S.SurgeonGeneral,2021;Abelson,Lipson,andEisenberg,2022;EisenbergandResnick,2006;Eisenberg,Hunt,andSpeer,2013;Lipsonetal.,2022).Thesegroupsmaybeespeciallyvulnerablebecauseofvariousfactors,suchas
experiencingmicroaggressions,uncertaintyabouttheirbelonging,andbasicneedsinsecurity(Goldrick-Rab,2016;Nadaletal.,2014;WaltonandCohen,2007).Inaddition,theNationalAcademiesofSciences,Engineering,andMedicine([NASEM],2021)calledonthefieldofhighereducationtoaddressgrowingconcernsaboutstudentmentalhealthbyidentifyingand
2DatafromtheAmericanCollegeHealthAssociation’sNationalCollegeHealthAssessmentarebasedonaself-
selectedsampleofU.S.postsecondaryinstitutions(28campusesand16,024studentsinthefirstsurveyinspring
2000).Arandomsamplingtechniquewasusedtorecruitparticipatingstudents.ThoughtheAmericanCollege
HealthAssociationrecognizesthatthesampleisnottechnicallygeneralizabletoallU.S.collegestudents,ithas
concluded,usingrigorousanalyses,thattheNationalCollegeHealthAssessmenthasbeenfoundtobeareliableand
validrepresentationofcollegestudentsintheUnitedStates(AmericanCollegeHealthAssociation,“Generalizability,Reliability,andValidityAnalysis,”undated).
2
elevatingemergingandpromisingapproachesthatofferan“all-hands”multilevelapproachtosupportstudentmentalhealth.
Communitycollegesservemorethan7millionstudentseachyear,makingthemthemain
entrypointformorethan40percentofstudentsseekingapostsecondaryeducationdegree
(CommunityCollegeResearchCenter,undated).Althoughtheprevalenceformentalhealth
problemshasremainedcomparableforcommunitycollegeandfour-y
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