NYT/AP: Mental Illness Strains School Counselors
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: April 20, 2007
NEW YORK (AP) -- Across America, college counseling centers are strained by rising numbers of mentally ill students and surging demand for mental health services -- a challenging trend as campus officials try to identify potential threats like the unstable Virginia Tech gunman.
And even when serious emotional problems are detected, university officials often feel constrained in how they respond due to an array of laws and policies protecting students' rights and privacy.
''The number of people coming to colleges who've had psychiatric treatment has increased tremendously,'' said Dr. Gerald Kay, a psychiatry professor at Wright State University and chair of the American Psychiatric Association committee on college mental health.
''Now they're able to come to college -- that would not have been the case earlier,'' Kay said. ''You've got a very large number of people who may have some vulnerabilities. It has stressed the availability of resources.''
Reasons for the surge include the Americans with Disabilities Act, which gives mentally ill students the right to be at college, and increasingly sophisticated medications which enable them to function better than in the past.
Recent surveys and studies underscore the scope of the increase.
A survey last year by the American College Health Association found that 8.5 percent of students had seriously considered suicide, and 15 percent were diagnosed for depression, up from 10 percent in 2000. The Anxiety Disorders Association of America found that 13 percent of students at major universities and 25 percent at liberal arts colleges are using campus mental health services....
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Virginia-Tech-Mental-Health.html