LGBTQ Students on Campus: Issues and Opportunities for Higher Education Leaders

Campus leaders have an opportunity and obligation to act to maintain higher education as a location for LGBTQ student development and learning, as well as to improve campus climate and increase inclusion. This article from Higher Education Today (a blog by ACE) includes recommendations in the areas of policy, practice, programming, and pedagogy.

Read more at this link.

Faculty Response Toolkit by University of Washington Tacoma (Mass Violence and Sexual Violence)

These two-page toolkits, developed by the University of Washington Tacoma, give faculty on campus sample statements to share in class as a response to current events surrounding sexual violence or events of mass violence. The sexual violence toolkit also lists confidential and non-confidential campus resources for students to be shared in tandem with the faculty statements. The mass violence toolkit also provides written content developed by the American Psychological Association (APA) to help students manage distress in the aftermath of an event of mass violence.

Faculty Support – Sexual Assault
Faculty Support – Mass Shooting

Voluntary Medical Leave for Students Experiencing Mental Health Difficulties at College

Many colleges struggle to understand how to enable their mental health leave of absence policies to meet the expectations inherent in the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). In this webinar, we will review the experience of one university that worked directly with the US Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) to construct a leave of absence policy. Presenters—SAMHSA and The Jed Foundation (JED)—will discuss the principles that emerged from the OCR’s oversight of developing this leave of absence policy and how these principles can inform colleges about meeting OCR’s expectations. Attendees will gain an understanding of how the OCR appears to interpret the ADA and how to best prepare policies and processes for mental health leaves of absence on your campus.

Click here to access the webinar via SPRC’s YouTube channel.

Evidence for a mental health crisis in graduate education

With mental illness a growing concern within graduate education, data from a new survey should prompt both academia and policy makers to consider intervention strategies. This article from March 2018 in Nature Biotechnology can inform specific mental health protection strategies for graduate students.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s subscription to Nature Biotechnology.

Understanding and Supporting Student-Athlete Mental Health

A recent survey conducted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), found that 30% of athletes reported feeling depressed in the last year, with 50% feeling overwhelmed by anxiety during the same period. However, only 10% of student-athletes seek help in comparison to 30% of nonathletes*. This data urgently calls for collaboration across athletics, counseling and health services to reduce the barriers to help-seeking, and better support these students.

We hosted an engaging webinar where experts from The Jed Foundation, Mid-American Conference, Kognito, and a student-athlete from Ohio University shared insights on:

  • Initiatives being implemented to raise awareness and increase cross-departmental collaboration.
  • Strategies to engage student-athletes as mental health advocates on campus.
  • Survey results from over 2,400 student-athletes about the state of student-athlete mental health.

Suggested Audiences:

  • Athletic Director
  • Director of Student-Athlete Development
  • Commissioner
  • Director of Student-Athlete Academic Success Services
  • Director of Counseling Center
  • Dean of Students
  • VP of Student Affairs

To access the webinar slides and recording, click here.

NaBITA Position Statement on Involuntary Withdrawal Best Practices

Ratified by the NaBITA Advisory Board on February 4, 2019, the following position statement provides recommendations on mandatory (or involuntary) leave, as well as the use of behavioral agreements. Remember to also refer to our JED Campus recommendations here when building your policies.

Click Here to Access the NaBITA Position Statement: Involuntary Withdrawal Best Practices

PsyberGuide

PsyberGuide is a non-profit website dedicated to consumers seeking to make responsible and informed decisions about computer and device-assisted therapies for mental illnesses. PsyberGuide is also intended for professionals and researchers seeking to enhance their knowledge in this area. PsyberGuide is not an industry website. PsyberGuide seeks to provide accurate and reliable information about software and apps designed to treat schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression and anxiety disorders. PsyberGuide also seeks to ensure that this information is available to all, and that it is free of preference, bias, or endorsement.

Click here to learn more about PsyberGuide on their website.

Sample counseling center satisfaction surveys

These are sample satisfaction surveys for mental health services / a counseling center that your school can use in updating or creating your own. Surveying your students about your campus programs is important in assessing their impact and effectiveness, as with most all objectives within your strategic planning.

Princeton University – CAPS satisfaction survey
University of Wisconsin – Madison: MHS satisfaction survey

Public Health Cannabis Campaign by University of Vermont

The following cannabis social marketing campaign, accessible from the link below, from the University of Vermont is primarily focused on raising awareness around cannabis misuse on campus. The themes in the posters come from focus groups held with UVM students who brought up the following topics as their motivation for change. You can view the posters, as well as a fact sheet that UVM developed for their students, on the Center for Health & Wellbeing at UVM website:

Click here to explore the campaign

Additionally, UVM developed T-Break: a guide to help support you on a cannabis tolerance break, which is a guide of daily practices with three weekly themes:

  1. Week 1- physical
  2. Week 2 – emotional
  3. Week 3 – spiritual / existential

DESCRIPTION FOR STUDENTS: It may be useful to read a few a days at once because there are practical things about sleep and appetite that may be helpful right away. Care has been put into the content and order, but you know what works best for you. Feel free to make this is a choose-your-own adventure guide.

JED Campus Discussion Call: Let’s Talk

On January 22, 2019, JED Campus hosted a call to discuss developing and implementing Let’s Talk programs. Greg Eells, PhD (Cornell University), Sudha Wadhwani, PsyD (Montclair State University), and Jude Uy, PhD (Montclair State University), presented how “Let’s Talk” has evolved at their institutions and shared their tips for success. Listen to the full audio recording below to hear why Dr. Eells says, “Even if I was a counseling center of one, I would make time for Let’s Talk – it’s that valuable.”

Click here to access the MP3 recording.

The Mental Health of the College Athlete

From the Wall Street Journal, December 2014:

Apparent Suicide of Ohio State Football Player Comes Amid a Push for Better Care of Student-Athletes –
In the wake of the apparent suicide of Ohio State football player Kosta Karageorge, what does the NCAA need to do to ensure players the adequate mental health services?

Click here to read the full article through a subscription to the Wall Street Journal.

Too Distressed to Learn? Mental Health Among Community College Students

A new study at 10 community colleges across the nation reveals that half of the more than 4,000 community college students surveyed are experiencing a current or recent mental health condition. Less than half of these students are receiving any mental health services. Students age 25 and younger are especially likely to have an untreated mental health condition. As mental illness can impair academic success and quality of life, there is a clear need for greater attention to and resources for mental health services and programs on community college campuses.

Click here to read the full report from Wisconsin HOPE Lab in March 2016.

Are You Being Rigorous or Just Intolerant?

From the Chronicle of Higher Education, May 2016:

I always took pride in being “a hard teacher.” I was rigorous but fair; my students didn’t need to be geniuses to succeed, they just needed to be “good students.” A good student attends class, sits attentively, participates in discussions, and meet deadlines. But after more than a decade of teaching, I realized that my idea of the good student was standing in the way of good teaching.

Click here to read more from the full article about how to promote mental health in the college classroom.

Expanding Access to Naloxone: Reducing Fatal Overdose, Saving Lives

Chief among today’s highly effective available practices to halt and reverse the growing toll of accidental overdose fatalities is naloxone hydrochloride (also known as Narcan™), a low-cost medicine available generically that was first approved by the FDA in 1971. Naloxone is an opioid antagonist that blocks the brain cell receptors activated by prescription opioids such as oxycodone, as well as by illicit opiates such as heroin. It temporarily restores normal breathing within two to three minutes of administration.

Naloxone is the first line of treatment for emergency room physicians and paramedics upon encountering a patient experiencing an overdose. Ideally, emergency medical responders are summoned as soon as an overdose is detected. A dose of naloxone is then administered and rescue breathing is initiated if necessary. If the victim has not been revived after two minutes, another dose of naloxone is administered and so on until the naloxone has the desired effect. Naloxone’s effects last for 30 to 75 minutes, allowing time for the arrival of emergency medical assistance. Though the research is contradictory, some studies suggest that once the naloxone effect wears off, opioids in the circulatory system may become toxic again and without medical attention victims can subsequently cease breathing again. However, naloxone can be administered repeatedly without harm.

Click here to read the issue brief from the Drug Policy Alliance.

Drinking to toxicity: college students referred for emergency medical evaluation

Abstract
Background: In 2009, a university adopted a policy of emergency department transport of students appearing intoxicated on campus. The objective was to describe the change in ED referrals after policy initiation and describe a group of students at risk for acute alcohol-related morbidity.
Methods: A retrospective cohort of university students during academic years 2007–2011 (September–June) transported to local ED’s was evaluated. Data were compared 2 years prior to initiation of the policy and 3 years after and included total number of ED transports and blood or breath alcohol level.
Results: 971 Students were transported to local ED’s. The mean number of yearly transports 2 years prior to policy initiation was 131 and 3 years after was 236 (56 % increase, p < 0.01). 92 % had a blood or breath alcohol level obtained. The mean alcohol level was 193 mg/dL. Twenty percent of students had alcohol levels greater than 250 mg/dL.
Conclusions: Adoption of a university alcohol policy was followed by a significant increase in ED transports of intoxicated students. College students identified as intoxicated frequently drank to toxicity.

Click here to view the full article from Addiction Science and Clinical Practice.

Advancing Integration of Behavioral Health into Primary Care: A Continuum-Based Framework

The need to bring high-quality treatment and management of depression, anxiety, and other common behavioral health conditions into primary care has been well documented, but for small to medium-size practices the complex models that are the standard for integrating medical and behavioral care are often beyond their resources. An innovative new framework, developed with support from a UHF grant, delineates a series of steps in eight key areas, or domains, that providers can take to move toward integration, allowing them to progress at a manageable pace in each of the areas independently, rather than attempting an all-or-nothing approach.

Click here to view the framework from United Hospital Fund.

Sample medication disposal programs

JED recommends implementing drug collection/medication disposal programs for prescription medications on campus. The following schools have good medication disposal programs that you can use in creating or updating your own. Remember to view all of JED’s recommendations about restricting access to potentially lethal means on your campus.

UC Davis – Medicine Collection Bin Installed at UC Davis Campus Police Department (and Quarter Sheet Handout)
KGI – Drug Take Back Day & Info Fair
SUNY Cortland – UPD Offers Easy Medication Disposal (and Disposal Infographic)
Stonehill College – Addressing Medication Disposal on Campus

 

Codelocks Americas | Schools, Colleges, and Universities

Schools and colleges need to create an environment where students, staff and teachers feel safe and secure. Controlling access to areas within the school or college campus will help achieve this. However access control should extend further than just restricting entry on the main school door, it should encompass all the vulnerable areas inside and outside the buildings. Protection needs to be given to rooms where valuable school property is sited or where materials, that could prove dangerous if in the wrong hands, are kept. Offices containing personal and confidential information should not be left open and students and teachers should have somewhere safe for their belongings when they are in class. A physical barrier should act as a deterrent and help create a safer environment for all.

Click here to access all recommendations from Codelocks.

The College Custodian as an Unheralded Pillar of Student Support

From the Chronicle, August 2016:

Jeremy J. Reed knows what it’s like to wear work boots on a campus. As an undergraduate at Loras College, where he was a first-generation student heavily dependent on federal aid, he labored as a painter for the Iowa campus’s maintenance department.

With fond memories of the support and encouragement he had received from other blue-collar workers on the campus, he later decided to study custodians as a doctoral student in higher education and student affairs at the University of Iowa. For his dissertation, completed last year, he shadowed four long-serving custodians on their rounds at a large Midwestern public university, which his research protocol precludes him from naming.

The Chronicle caught up with Mr. Reed this week at the University of Wisconsin at Whitewater, where he is now director of admissions, to ask him about his custodian study. Following is an edited and condensed transcript of that interview.

Click here to read the full article and interview through your institution’s access to The Chronicle of Higher Education.

myStrength | Digital Behavioral Health

The myStrength experience is based in clinical models like cognitive behavioral therapy, acceptance and commitment therapy, positive psychology, mindfulness, and motivational interviewing – proven interventions that have helped millions improve and sustain health and well-being. myStrength adjusts each day and with every interaction. Preferences and goals, current emotional and motivational states, ongoing life events are all captured. Sophisticated machine learning algorithms create individualized myStrength experiences which include interactive programs, in-the-moment coping tools, inspirational resources and community support. myStrength offers depth and breadth to build resiliency, manage stress, improve mood, sleep better or simply find daily inspiration. Their platform empowers users with individualized pathways incorporating multiple programs to help manage and overcome co-occurring challenges.

Click here to learn more about myStrength on their website.

Collegiate Recovery Programs: A Win-Win Proposition for Students and Colleges

Published in August 2016 from the Center of Young Adult Health and Development (CYAHD), this report explains collegiate recovery programs, and provides information on the benefits and the impact of collegiate recovery programs on the college campus.

Click here to view the full report.

Opioid Prescribing in College Health

The United States is facing a prescription opioid epidemic. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported prescription and sales of opioid medication has quadrupled since 1999. Between the years of 1999 and 2014, 165,000 people have died from an overdose of opioid pain medication in the United States.

A majority of pain medication prescriptions written in the college health setting are for acute pain, though some students need pain management for more chronic issues. College health providers may not feel comfortable prescribing long term pain management, but smaller or more rural campuses may not have access to qualified pain management specialists; providers thus may feel both obligated and unprepared to prescribe.

The ACHA Task Force for Opioid Prescribing in College Health has created these guidelines to further an understanding of the issues surrounding opioid prescribing; review major concepts designed to maximize safety and reduce potential for abuse; and identify possible avenues to assist addicted students with rehabilitation, recovery, and return to the college environment. These guidelines are not intended to be comprehensive, and national issues and recommendations may change over time. Therefore, college health professionals are encouraged to seek additional resources and specific clinical advice as indicated.

Click here to view the full set of guidelines from the ACHA.

Alcohol Policies and Suicide: A Review of the Literature

Abstract

Both intoxication and chronic heavy alcohol use are associated with suicide. There is extensive population‐level evidence linking per capita alcohol consumption with suicide. While alcohol policies can reduce excessive alcohol consumption, the relationship between alcohol policies and suicide warrants a critical review of the literature. This review summarizes the associations between various types of alcohol policies and suicide, both in the United States and internationally, as presented in English‐language literature published between 1999 and 2014. Study designs, methodological challenges, and limitations in ascertaining the associations are discussed. Because of the substantial between‐states variation in alcohol policies, U.S.‐based studies contributed substantially to the literature. Repeated cross‐sectional designs at both the ecological level and decedent level were common among U.S.‐based studies. Non‐U.S. studies often used time series data to evaluate pre–post comparisons of a hybrid set of policy changes. Although inconsistency remained, the published literature in general supported the protective effect of restrictive alcohol policies on reducing suicide as well as the decreased level of alcohol involvement among suicide decedents. Common limitations included measurement and selection bias and a focus on effects of a limited number of alcohol policies without accounting for other alcohol policies. This review summarizes a number of studies that suggest restrictive alcohol policies may contribute to suicide prevention on a general population level and to a reduction of alcohol involvement among suicide deaths.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to Wiley Online Library.

Supporting Student-Athlete Mental Wellness by NCAA

From NCAA:

Student-athletes, coaches, and faculty athletics representatives play a critical role in creating an environment that supports the mental health and well-being of college athletes. That’s why the Sport Science Institute developed web-based educational modules to help normalize and destigmatize mental health help seeking for college athletes.

If you are an NCAA student-athlete, coach, or faculty athletics representative, the interactive modules will provide information to help you promote mental wellness and resiliency on your campus and to encourage and destigmatize help-seeking for mental health concerns.

Click here to access the education modules on the NCAA website.

Building Resilient Communities: An Online Training

From RAND:

This easy-to-use, self-guided online training shows organizations and communities how to strengthen their resilience. Resilience means:

  • mitigating and withstanding the stress of manmade and natural disasters
  • recovering in a way that restores normal functioning
  • applying lessons learned from past responses to better withstand future incidents.

This training is intended for a diverse range of organizations, including businesses; faith-based organizations; hospitals, health clinics, and other health agencies; mental health providers; schools and universities; civic and volunteer groups; first responders; local government agencies; public health departments; and nonprofit agencies.

When you complete this training, you will have a real action plan to use that will help you build resilience in your organization or across your community, bolstering your capacity to respond to and recover from disaster.

Click here to access the online training.

Action Alliance Framework for Successful Messaging

The Framework is a research-based resource that outlines four key factors to consider when developing public messages about suicide:

  • Strategy
  • Safety
  • Conveying a “Positive Narrative”
  • Following applicable Guidelines.

The Framework was created by the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention as part of its priority to change the public conversation about suicide.
Click here to visit the Action Alliance Framework for Successful Messaging website.

Higher Education Center | for Alcohol and Drug Misuse Prevention and Recovery

The Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Drug Misuse Prevention and Recovery (HECAOD) is the premier alcohol and drug misuse prevention and recovery resource for colleges and universities across the nation.  HECAOD is a joint collaboration between The Ohio State University’s College of Social Work, College of Pharmacy, Office of Student Life, Generation Rx, and the Collegiate Recovery Community.

Click here to navigate to the Higher Education Website.

Preventing Suicide: A Technical Package of Policy, Programs, and Practices

A technical package is a collection of strategies that represents the best available evidence to prevent or reduce public health problems like suicide. This package from the CDC highlights 7 strategies to prevent suicide:

  • Strengthen economic supports
  • Strengthen access and delivery of suicide care
  • Create protective environments
  • Promote connectedness
  • Teach coping and problem-solving skills
  • Identify and support people at-risk
  • Lessen harms and prevent future risk

The strategies are intended to work in combination and reinforce each other. Their implementation requires a collective effort across sectors. The technical package describes the approaches to advance each strategy and the evidence behind them. The strategies in the technical package support the goals and objectives of the National Strategy for Suicide Prevention and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention and American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s goal to reduce the annual rate of suicide by 20% by 2025.

Click here to view the full technical package from the CDC.

College students at residential campuses benefit from access to student health insurance programs

JED recommends that schools research the feasibility of offering a school-sponsored health insurance policy. In alignment with this recommendation, HBC (Hodgkins Beckley Consulting) released study data in March 2017 affirming the benefits when students are provided health insurance by the university. A PDF copy of HBC’s press release can be found by clicking here.

Healthy Minds Network | Healthy Minds Study

The Healthy Minds Network for Research on Adolescent and Young Adult Mental Health (HMN) is dedicated to improving the mental and emotional well-being of young people through innovative, multidisciplinary scholarship. HMN addresses the connection between the mental health of adolescents and young adults and their health behaviors, physical health, and social, educational, and economic outcomes.

Click here to navigate to past webinars by HMN.
Click here to navigate to HMN’s 10-Year study: “Increased Rates of Mental Health Service Utilization by U.S. College Students…”

Click here to navigate back to the JED Campus Dashboard to re-review information about HMN’s Healthy Minds Study (HMS), and your participation through JED Campus.

Online resources for substance abuse education

JED Campus recommends that you educate your students about the risks and consequences of substance use/misuse. The following are educational resources you can use on your campus.

Data and Resource Pages:

SAMHSA – Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drugs
CDC – Fact Sheets: Alcohol and Caffeine

Alcohol and Its Effects with Other Drugs:

University of Michigan – The Effects of Combining Alcohol with Other Drugs

Student Toolkits:

Talkaboutrx.org – What You Can Do: Tips for Raising Awareness about Prescription Drug Abuse on Campus

Online resources for trauma informed care

According to SAMHSA’s concept of a trauma-informed approach, “A program, organization, or system that is trauma-informed:

  1. Realizes the widespread impact of trauma and understands potential paths for recovery;
  2. Recognizes the signs and symptoms of trauma in clients, families, staff, and others involved with the system;
  3. Responds by fully integrating knowledge about trauma into policies, procedures, and practices; and
  4. Seeks to actively resist re-traumatization.”

The following resources provide good tools for enhancing services on campus through a trauma informed approach:

SAMHSA – Trauma-Informed Approach and Trauma-Specific Interventions
The Trauma Informed Care Project
ACEs Connection – Incorporating Trauma Informed Practice and ACEs into Professional Curricula: A Toolkit
ACHA – Trauma-Informed Care on a College Campus

 

20 Ways to Make Your Campus Diversity Program a Success

From April 2016:

Higher education campuses all over the country are focused on diversity initiatives. UC Santa Cruz recently announced the hiring of a new Campus Diversity Officer for Staff and Students. And it’s not the only one. UConn also hired its first Chief Diversity Officer.

Additionally, students are also raising awareness for diversity. Earlier this month, students at Penn State organized a walk to promote inclusion on campus. And UW-Madison announced plans to start a pilot program with the goal of addressing cultural competency and community building.

So to help your campus make its diversity program a success, we’ve put together a list of 20 different strategies you can implement right now.

Click here to read the full article on Campus Answers.

Online resources for care/case management

Care/case management is crucial to the coordination of care of your students, such as with off-campus services. The following resources provide guidance and information on care/case management which you can use in creating and updating your own systems; you can also find sample descriptions of school care/case manager positions in the JED Campus playbook.

NaBITA/ACCA – Case Management in Higher Education
HECMA – Higher Education Case Managers Association
National Council for Behavioral Health – Case Management to Care Management

 

 

Suicide and Substance Use in Young People

“Suicide and Substance Use in Young People” provides an overview on the relationship between suicide and substance use among young people, and includes best practices in prevention and intervention. Click here to watch the webinar, hosted on SAMHSA’s YouTube page.

Social-Emotional Learning Is the Rage in K-12. So Why Not in College?

From May 2017: 

Whether you believe the purpose of college is to foster intellectual curiosity or simply to land a job after graduation, emotional well-being is a prerequisite to both. Research links learning ability to social and emotional health, which will become increasingly important for workplace success in the coming decades.

Yet, mental health is a growing crisis within both secondary schools and universities, where demand for counseling services is rapidly outstripping supply. Given the critical importance of mental well-being for student success both in school and after, how can schools evolve to better serve students in this area?

Click here to read the full article on EdSurge.

SPRC – Suicide Prevention Resource Center: Colleges and Universities

Suicide and suicidal behaviors are a major concern for colleges and universities. Suicide is a leading cause of death among college and university students in the United States. In addition to the students who die by suicide, many others struggle with suicidal thoughts and other mental health problems.

Why Address Suicide Prevention: 

  • Mental health issues often first appear between the ages of 18 and 24, so colleges are uniquely situated to help these young people.
  • Students’ mental health can affect their academic performance.
  • Suicidal thoughts and behaviors can impact the entire campus community.

Click here to navigate to SPRC—Recommended Resources—on the SPRC page for colleges and universities.

Suicide in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Athletes

Background: The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) has recently highlighted mental health concerns in student athletes, though the incidence of suicide among NCAA athletes is unclear. The purpose of this study was to determine the rate of suicide among NCAA athletes.

Hypothesis: The incidence of suicide in NCAA athletes differs by sex, race, sport, and division.

Study Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Level of Evidence: Level 3.

Methods: NCAA Memorial Resolutions list and published NCAA demographic data were used to identify student-athlete deaths and total participant seasons from 2003-2004 through 2011-2012. Deaths were analyzed by age, sex, race, division, and sport.

Results: Over the 9-year study period, 35 cases of suicide were identified from a review of 477 student-athlete deaths during 3,773,309 individual participant seasons. The overall suicide rate was 0.93/100,000 per year. Suicide represented 7.3% (35/477) of all-cause mortality among NCAA student athletes. The annual incidence of suicide in male athletes was 1.35/100,000 and in female athletes was 0.37/100,000 (relative risk [RR], 3.7; P < 0.01). The incidence in African American athletes was 1.22/100,000 and in white athletes was 0.87/100,000 (RR, 1.4; P = 0.45). The highest rate of suicide occurred in men’s football (2.25/100,000), and football athletes had a relative risk of 2.2 (P = 0.03) of committing suicide compared with other male, nonfootball athletes.

Conclusion: The suicide rate in NCAA athletes appears to be lower than that of the general and collegiate population of similar age. NCAA male athletes have a significantly higher rate of suicide compared with female athletes, and football athletes appear to be at greatest risk.

Clinical Relevance: Suicide represents a preventable cause of death, and development of effective prevention programs is recommended.

Click here to view the full study through your institution’s subscription to Sage Journals.

Equity in Mental Health Framework [JED]

The Equity in Mental Health Framework is a joint project of the Steve Fund and The Jed Foundation (JED) to help colleges and universities support and enhance the mental health of students of color. The framework provides academic institutions with a set of ten actionable recommendations and key implementation strategies to help strengthen their activities and programs to address the mental health disparities facing students of color. It is based on expert input from the College Mental Health Program at McLean Hospital, a national Nielsen online poll of 1,000 college students, a scientific literature review, a national convening of higher education leaders, and an electronic survey of higher education administrators.

Learn more on the Equity in Mental Health Framework website.

The Steve Fund

The Steve Fund is the nation’s only organization focused on supporting the mental health and emotional well-being of young people of color.  The Steve Fund works with colleges and universities, non-profits, researchers, mental health experts, families, and young people to promote programs and strategies that build understanding and assistance for the mental and emotional health of the nation’s young people of color.  The Fund holds an annual conference, Young, Gifted & @Risk, and offers a Knowledge Center with curated expert information. With multicultural mental health experts it delivers on-campus and on-site programs and services for colleges and non-profits, and through tech partnerships it provides direct services to young people of color.

Click here to navigate to The Steve Fund website.

HIPAA Privacy Rule and Sharing Information Related to Mental Health

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule provides consumers with important privacy rights and protections with respect to their health information,
including important controls over how their health information is used and disclosed by health plans and health care providers. Ensuring strong privacy protections is critical to maintaining individuals’ trust in their health care providers and willingness to obtain needed health care services, and these protections are especially important where very sensitive information is concerned, such as mental health information. At the same time, the Privacy Rule recognizes circumstances arise where health information may need to be shared to ensure the patient receives the best treatment and for other important purposes, such as for the health and safety of the patient or others. The Rule is carefully balanced to allow uses and disclosures of information—including mental health information—for treatment and these other purposes with appropriate protections.

Click here to access the full guide.

Mary Christie Foundation

The Mary Christie Foundation is a thought leadership and philanthropic organization dedicated to the health and wellness of teens and young adults, our next generation of leaders. With world-renowned experts in health care policy, public health, behavioral health and higher education, the Mary Christie Foundation contributes to the examination and resolution of the most pressing, and often overlooked, health issues facing young people. Issues include the emotional, social and behavioral health of today’s college students, to access to and completion of quality higher education. MCF strategic philanthropy supports people and programs that further our mission to promote the health and education of our next generation of leaders.

Click here to navigate to the Mary Christie Foundation website.
Click here to view and/or subscribe to the MCFeed Weekly Update.

HERI – Higher Education Research Institute

The Cooperative Institutional Research Program (CIRP) is a national longitudinal study of the American higher education system. It is regarded as the most comprehensive source of information on college students. Established in 1966 at the American Council on Education, the CIRP is now the nation’s largest and oldest empirical study of higher education, involving data on some 1,900 institutions, over 15 million students, and more than 300,000 faculty. CIRP surveys have been administered by the Higher Education Research Institute since 1973. The CIRP longitudinal program consists of the Freshman Survey (TFS) , Your First College Year (YFCY) Survey, Diverse Learning Environments Survey (DLE), and the College Senior Survey (CSS).

Click here to access the HERI website.
Click here to access HERI infographics, including statistics from The Freshman Survey.

Start Your Recovery

StartYourRecovery.org provides helpful information for people who are dealing with substance use issues — and their family members, friends, and co-workers, too. SYR knows that there is no one-size-fits-all solution to the challenges faced by those who misuse alcohol, prescription or illegal drugs, or other substances, and they aim to break through the clutter to help people at any stage of recovery. SYR’s goal is to offer people who are dealing with substance use issues a single source of reputable, objective information about signs, symptoms, conditions, treatment options, and resources — presented in a user-friendly format and in language that’s easy to understand.

Click here to visit the Start Your Recovery website.

Even teachers now say that academics are not the key to kids’ success

 

To many, increasing automation and the unprecedented pace of technological changes mean kids need more than just academic skills to succeed. They need confidence and motivation to tackle problems, interpersonal skills to work with others and the resilience to stay on task when things fall apart.

New research from the Sutton Trust, a British foundation focused on social mobility, finds that 88% of young people, 94% of employers, and 97% of teachers say these so-called life skills are as or more important than academic qualifications. Perhaps more surprising: more than half of teachers surveyed—53%—believe these “non-cognitive” or “soft” skills are more important than academic skills to young people’s success.

Click here to read the full article.

Breathe by Northwestern University

Breathe is a stress management resource, created purposely for Northwestern Undergraduate students, as well as Graduate & Professional students.

In Breathe, you will find a variety of guided meditations and breathing practices to help you deal with stress.

You may not be able to eliminate the stresses of life, but you can develop positive coping skills to reduce the negative impact on our mind, body, and spirit…decreasing perfectionism and self-criticism, as well as enhancing our confidence and wellbeing.

Click here to explore Breathe, by Northwestern. You can use the resource as an example to create or update similar programs on your campus.

The Effects of College Counseling Services on Academic Performance and Retention

Abstract

For this study, we examined the relationship between counseling experience and college students’ academic performance and retention in a sample of 10,009 college freshmen and transfer students. The results indicated that counseling experience is significantly associated with student retention: students receiving counseling services were more likely to stay enrolled in school. However, counseling experience was not related to academic performance when controlling for precollege academic performance (i.e., high school GPA, and verbal and math SAT scores). In addition, students seeking both individual and group counseling showed better academic performance than the students who received other service types.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access through Project MUSE.

College Counseling and Student Retention: Research Findings and Implications for Counseling Centers

Abstract

College counseling centers may come under increasing scrutiny by administrators regarding how their services contribute to student retention. College counselors can use data to demonstrate a positive influence of counseling on retention, but they also need to educate administrators that student retention should be a consideration among many when evaluating the efficacy of services. The author reviews findings from studies on the impact of college counseling on retention and addresses implications for counseling centers.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s subscription to Wiley Online Library.

Counseling center contributions to student retention and graduation: A longitudinal assessment

Abstract

This study explored the impact of counseling on academic progress and retention, using both objective and self-reported measures from records of counseling clients (n = 2,365) and the general student body (n = 67,026) during 6 years at a Western state university. Among the findings: Counseled students showed superior retention compared to peers.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to the Web of Science Core Collection.

The Comprehensive Counseling Center Model

The authors outline a four-factor model and philosophy for college mental health services that addresses the loss of comprehensiveness in some centers due to changes in organizational structure. Given research on demand for services and retention of those seen in centers, emphasis is placed in particular upon the value of consultation, outreach, and training work across the entire campus community. The model challenges some assumptions made by proponents of integrated care, including its definition, and illustrates the benefits of establishing and maintaining a fully comprehensive college counseling service.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to Taylor & Francis Online.

Promoting Resilience, Retention, and Mental Health

Abstract

This chapter describes why resilience and mental health deserve more attention in efforts to increase student retention.
The chapter offers practical suggestions for campus administrators and others.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to Wiley Online Library.

The Counseling Center: An Undervalued Resource in Recruitment, Retention, and Risk Management

A primary responsibility for directors of college and university counseling centers is to explain to various audiences the multiple ways such units are of value to their institutions. This article reviews the history of how counseling center directors have been encouraged to develop and describe the work of their centers. Often overlooked are the contributions that counseling centers make to institutional recruitment, retention, and risk-management activities. Research that demonstrates the relationship between counseling centers and each of these functions is reviewed and some recommendations for counseling center directors are offered.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to Taylor & Francis Online.

Comparison of Collaborative Care and Colocation Treatment for Patients With Clinically Significant Depression Symptoms in Primary Care

Objective: The study compared clinical outcomes of depression treatment in primary care with a colocation model versus a collaborative care model (CoCM).

Methods: Patients (N=240) with Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores of ≥10 treated for clinically significant depression symptoms in primary care sites implementing the CoCM or a colocation model were compared. PHQ-9 scores were collected at baseline and 12 weeks.

Results: From baseline to follow-up, reductions in PHQ-9 scores were 33% for the CoCM sites and 14% for the colocation sites, with an unadjusted mean difference in scores of 2.81 (p=.001).

Conclusions: More patients treated in sites that used the CoCM experienced a significantly greater reduction in depression symptoms, compared with patients in sites with the colocation model. As greater adoption of integration models in primary care occurs, it will be important to consider potential implications of these results for promoting adoption of CoCM elements. Further replication of these findings is warranted.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to Psychiatry Online.

Improve Student Retention By Promoting Emotional Wellness On Campus

Research shows that there is a direct relationship between students’ mental health, retention rates, and academic performance. Nearly 30% of college students reported feeling so depressed that it was difficult for them to function. This critical connection makes mental health a priority to everyone on campus who has student retention and academic performance as their core objectives.

In this webinar, experts from Ohio State University, Vanderbilt University and Kognito provide insights on the relationship between students’ mental health and their academic success. In addition, the panelists will provide effective strategies that schools can implement to improve emotional wellness on campus and therefore retention rates and academic performance.

Suggested Audience:

  • Academic Advisor
  • VP of Student Affairs
  • Director of Counseling Center
  • Dean of Student Services
  • Residence Life

Click here to access the webinar via Kognito.

Advancing social connection as a public health priority in the United States

A robust body of scientific evidence has indicated that being embedded in high-quality close relationships and feeling socially connected to the people in one’s life is associated with decreased risk for all-cause mortality as well as a range of disease morbidities. Despite mounting evidence that the magnitude of these associations is comparable to that of many leading health determinants (that receive significant public health resources), government agencies, health care providers and associations, and public or private health care funders have been slow to recognize human social relationships as either a health determinant or health risk marker in a manner that is comparable to that of other public health priorities. This article evaluates current evidence (on social relationships and health) according to criteria commonly used in determining public health priorities. The article discusses challenges for reducing risk in this area and outlines an agenda for integrating social relationships into current public health priorities.
(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)

Click here to access the full article on PsycNET.

Effectiveness of Online Collaborative Care for Treating Mood and Anxiety Disorders in Primary Care

Questions  Is combining an internet support group (ISG) with a care manager–guided computerized cognitive behavioral therapy (CCBT) program better at treating depression and anxiety than CCBT alone and better than primary care physicians’ usual care for these conditions?

Findings  Among 704 patients randomized to CCBT+ISG, CCBT alone, or their primary care physicians’ usual care, patients in the CCBT+ISG and CCBT alone cohorts reported similar improvements in mental health–related quality of life, mood, and anxiety symptoms, while patients in the CCBT alone cohort reported greater improvements in mood and anxiety than usual care.

Meaning  Providing moderated access to ISG provided no measurable benefit at treating depression and anxiety over care manager–supported CCBT; however, care manager–supported CCBT was more effective than primary care physicians’ usual care for these conditions.

Click here to access the full study from JAMA Network.

Research note: social leisure engagement, peer support, and depressive symptomology among emerging adults

This research note applied self-determination theory to the study of social leisure and well-being among collegiate emerging adults. Self-determination theory posits that individuals seek out environments that promote basic psychological needs; among these needs is the need for relatedness. We examined the relationship between social leisure engagement (conceptualised as an environment that promotes connections to others) and emerging adults’ depressive symptomology. More specifically, we hypothesised that this need-supportive environment would be related to higher levels of peer support (a form of relatedness) and would promote better mental health. Participants (N = 270) were between the ages of 18 and 25. Using path models, we found that there was a significant negative relationship between social leisure engagement and depressive symptomology. Furthermore, peer support served as a significant linking mechanism between social leisure and depressive symptomology. Results provide evidence for the application of self-determination theory to the study of social leisure engagement as a need-supportive environment that can facilitate relatedness and better mental health among emerging adults.

Click here to access the full research note via your institution’s subscription to Taylor & Francis Online.

Empathy and well-being correlate with centrality in different social networks

Which traits make individuals popular or lead others to turn to them in times of stress? We examine these questions by observing newly formed social networks in first-year college dormitories. We measured dorm members’ traits (for example, their empathy) as well as their position in their dorm’s social networks. Via network analysis, we corroborate insights from psychological research: people who exude positive emotions are sought out by others for fun and excitement, whereas empathic individuals are sought out for trust and support. These findings show that individuals’ traits are related to their network positions and to the different roles that they play in supporting their communities.”

Click here to access the full article through PNAS.

The American Freshman: National Norms Fall 2016

Polarized politics, mental health concerns, and increased institutional efforts to confront and prevent campus sexual assault represent some of the heated national topics that colleges and universities helped us measure in 2016. With its findings from the 2016 Freshman Survey and other national datasets, the Higher Education Research Institute (HERI) provided campus leaders, policymakers, Supreme Court justices, and the general public with critical insights about how these debates have affected and are perceived by today’s college students.

Click here to view the full report.

Sample programs for supporting commuter students

Schools should consider thinking strategically about supporting commuter students on their campus. The following schools have good programs to support social connectedness for commuter students. Remember to view all of JED’s recommendations about promoting social connectedness on your campus.

Fordham University – Commuter Student Services
Montclair State University – Commuter Life
University of Pittsburgh – Commuter Student Programs
University of Memphis – Parents of Commuter Students
Rutgers University – Rutgers Commuter Student Association

 

Sample programs for supporting transfer students

Schools should consider thinking strategically about supporting transfer students on their campus. The following schools have good programs to support social connectedness for transfer students. Remember to view all of JED’s recommendations about promoting social connectedness on your campus.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln – Transfer Students
University of Michigan – School of Literature, Science and the Arts (LSA): Resources for Transfer Students

NCCSD – National Center for College Students with Disabilities

NCCSD’s mission is in the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008.  NCCSD has three purposes:

  1. Provide technical assistance and information to anyone needing information about disability and higher education, including college students, their families, faculty, college administrators and staff,  disability services professionals​​​​​​​, researchers, and policymakers.  
  2. Collect information and do research about disability services at campuses in the United States, sharing findings with the public. 
  3. Report to the U.S. Department of Education about the current status of college students with disabilities in the U.S.  

Click here to view the NCCSD website.

Break-away rod suppliers and products

Break-away rods and other break-away installations are important measures for restricting access for potentially lethal means. The following links will direct you to potential products and suppliers; however, these do not represent an exhaustive list, nor does JED endorse these products over similar products:

SecuringHospitals.com – Suicide Resistant Products
Behavioral Safety Solutions – Suppliers: Online Wholesalers of Anti-Ligature and Anti-Suicide Products
Mega Jailhouse – “Break Away” Shower Rod Flanges
Amazon.com – QuikCLOSET

 

Rate, Relative Risk, and Method of Suicide by Students at 4‐Year Colleges and Universities in the United States, 2004–2005 through 2008–2009

A total of 622 suicides were reported among students attending 645 distinct campuses from 2004–2005 through 2008–2009. Adjusting for gender in the population at risk of 14.9 million student‐years and for the source of these data, the student suicide rate of 7.0 was significantly and substantially lower than for a matched national sample. Suicide rates by firearm were significantly and substantially lower for both female and male students. Hanging was significantly and substantially lower for male students, less prominently so for female students. It is principally the ninefold decrease in the availability of firearms on campuses (vs. homes) and secondarily other features of the campus environment that are the bases for lower student suicide rates.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s subscription to Wiley Online Library.

Means Matter

Restricting access to lethal means is important to reducing the risk of suicide on a college campus. Colleges and universities should consider the following steps to assess and implement means restriction:

1.) Gathering information
2.) Engaging the entire campus and community
3.) Changing policies and practices
4.) Working with the media

Click here to read the full article, distributed by SPRC.

Opioid Overdose Prevention Programs Providing Naloxone to Laypersons

Drug overdose deaths in the United States have more than doubled since 1999, reaching a total of 43,982 in 2013. Heroin and prescription opioids are major causes of drug overdose deaths. Naloxone is the standard medication used for reversal of the potentially fatal respiratory depression caused by opioid overdose. From 1996 through June 2014, a total of 644 local sites in 30 states and the District of Columbia reported providing naloxone kits to 152,283 laypersons and receiving reports of 26,463 drug overdose reversals using naloxone from 1996 through June 2014. Most laypersons who reported using the kits to reverse an overdose were persons who use drugs, and many of the reported reversals involved heroin overdoses. Medical clinics and pharmacies have started providing naloxone kits to laypersons, and the reported number of organizations providing kits almost doubled from January 2013 through June 2014. Organizations training and providing naloxone kits to laypersons can reach large numbers of potential overdose witnesses and result in many reported overdose reversals. Comprehensive prevention measures that include teaching laypersons how to respond to overdoses and administer naloxone prevent opioid-related drug overdose deaths. Additional methods are needed to provide naloxone kits to persons who might witness prescription opioid analgesic overdoses.

Click here to read the full article, published by the CDC in 2015.

Online resources for opioid overdose response (and naloxone)

The following resources provide information about responding to opioid overdoses, including first responder training for naloxone:

Harm Reduction Coalition – Responding to Opioid Overdose
Mass.gov – Opioid Overdose Prevention Information
National Institute on Drug Abuse – Naloxone: A Potential Lifesaver

SAMHSA – Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) is the agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services that leads public health efforts to advance the behavioral health of the nation. SAMHSA’s mission is to reduce the impact of substance abuse and mental illness on America’s communities. SAMHSA produces various programs, publications, and reports, and provides grants to support mental health services such as the Garrett Lee Smith (GLS) grant.

Click here to navigate to the SAMHSA website.

 

SAMHSA Opioid Overdose Prevention Toolkit

This toolkit offers strategies to health care providers, communities, and local governments for developing practices and policies to help prevent opioid-related overdoses and deaths. Access reports for community members, prescribers, patients and families, and those recovering from opioid overdose.

Click here to view and/or download the full toolkit.

Crisis Text Line

Crisis Text Line is free, 24/7 support for those in crisis. Text 741741 from anywhere in the US to text with a trained Crisis Counselor. Crisis Text Line trains volunteers to support people in crisis.

Click here to read more about Crisis Text Line on their website.
Click here to read a New York Times article on Crisis Text Line.
Click here to read more about Crisis Text Line’s impact through their Crisis Trends website.

Sample counseling center triage systems

JED Campuses should develop/refine a triage system in their counseling centers for those in serious or urgent need of care. The following schools have good triage systems that you can use as examples for creating or modifying your own.

University of Pittsburgh – How to Make an Appointment
UMass Amherst – Getting Started

The Implementation of Mental Health Clinical Triage Systems in University Health Services

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to Taylor and Francis Online.

Listening Hours by Barnard College

JED Campus recommends that you provide counseling services outside of the counseling center. “Listening Hours” is an example program by Barnard College that provides free drop-in counseling at various residence halls. Feel free to use this program as an example as you seek to create similar programs on your campus.

Click here to visit Barnard’s page on Listening Hours.

Mental Health First Aid

Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) is an 8-hour course that teaches you how to identify, understand and respond to signs of mental illnesses and substance use disorders. The training gives you the skills you need to reach out and provide initial help and support to someone who may be developing a mental health or substance use problem or experiencing a crisis.

MHFA takes the fear and hesitation out of starting conversations about mental health and substance use problems by improving understanding and providing an action plan that teaches people to safely and responsibly identify and address a potential mental illness or substance use disorder.

For MHFA on college and university campuses, the National Council for Behavioral Health has developed Mental Health First Aid for Higher Education. To learn more about this population-specific module for MHFA, please click the links below to view an overview and agenda for the course.

Mental Health First Aid for Higher Education – Overview
Mental Health First Aid for Higher Education – Agenda

First Generation Student Success: A Landscape Analysis of Programs and Services at Four-Year Institutions

The Center for First-generation Student Success, an initiative of NASPA and The Suder Foundation, has recently released a report which offers a mixed-method analysis of four-year institutions and how they identify and serve first-generation students. They found that while the majority of colleges now identify first-generation status, we still need more direct support for this critical student population.

NASPA is building the case for increased support for first-generation students. The report is highlighted by these findings:

  • Eighty percent of four-year institutions surveyed now identify first-generation status at the point of admission
  • However, institutions are inconsistent in sharing that information across campus and monitoring outcomes for first-generation students. Only 61 percent of four-year institutions track outcomes for these students; 41 percent use data to inform support programs for them; and only 28 percent store information on first-generation status in systems that faculty can access and use.
  • The most successful campuses are taking an “asset-based approach” to developing programs that leverage the inherent strengths of first-generation students to improve belonging, efficacy, and outcomes.
  • Nevertheless, these efforts are often hindered by resource constraints and inconsistent definitions for first-generation status across programs.
You can view a full copy of the report by clicking here. You can find other valuable resources on the Center for First-generation Student Success website.

Are Campuses Ready to Support Students in Distress? [JED/Kognito]

Co-authored by The Jed Foundation (JED) and Kognito, this whitepaper highlights data findings from a survey of 65,177 faculty, staff, and students in 100+ colleges and universities to answer:

  1. How prepared are faculty, staff, and students to refer students to the appropriate resources?
  2. Is it part of the role of faculty, staff, or students to connect students experiencing signs of distress with mental health services?
  3. Are they already connecting students at sufficient levels?

Click here to view the whitepaper.

NASPA – Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education

NASPA is the leading association for the advancement, health, and sustainability of the student affairs profession. Their work provides high-quality professional development, advocacy, and research for 15,000 members in all 50 states, 25 countries, and 8 U.S. territories. Below you can view an outline of the 2019-2022 NASPA Strategic Plan:

Goal 1: Deliver dynamic, innovative, and timely professional development and volunteer engagement opportunities to build the leadership capacities and effectiveness of student affairs professionals.
Goal 2: Generate scholarship and disseminate knowledge that supports evidence-based, innovative, inclusive, and socially just student affairs practices.
Goal 3: Lead public policy and advocacy efforts that shape the changing landscape of student affairs within higher education.
Goal 4: Provide leadership for student affairs in integrating existing and emerging technologies.
Goal 5: Develop and promote NASPA’s identity as a global student affairs association.

Click here to navigate to the NASPA website.

“The BACCHUS Initiatives of NASPA” supports collegiate peer educators and advisors by empowering students and student affairs administrators to create campus environments which are healthy and safe.

Visit the BACCHUS Initiatives of NASPA page.

NASPA’s “Culture of Respect Collective” guides institutional stakeholders through a step-by-step strategic assessment and planning process to improve efforts to address sexual violence. The mission of Culture of Respect is to build the capacity of educational institutions to end sexual violence through ongoing, expansive organizational change.

As of October 31, 2018, NASPA’s Culture of Respect website was relaunched, and includes a new Prevention Programming Matrix and Research Inventory.

SIGMA Threat Management

SIGMA helps colleges and universities develop and implement a threat assessment capacity that fits within their unique cultures and that is effective in both preventing violence and helping persons in need. They train higher education institutions on how to establish and operate a threat assessment team (or add threat assessment capabilities to an existing team) and how to identify, investigate, evaluate, and intervene with persons and situations that raise concern on campus. For institutions with existing threat assessment teams, they help evaluate and enhance current procedures and resources to be consistent with the new national standard. SIGMA consults on individual threat cases and provides guidance on crafting or revising institutional policies and procedures to facilitate effective threat assessment and collaborative case management.

Click here to read more about SIGMA on their website.

You can also learn more about SIGMA via this article by the APA on Marisa Reddy Randazzo, their founder.

ConcernCenter

ConcernCenter is a new tool that puts support in your student’s hands. Students simply identify their concern and are provided with a prioritized list of helpful resources. “Resources” can be people, offices, or even off-campus services that have been previously identified by college personnel to assist students with that particular concern.


ConcernCenter is fully customizable to your institution and is compatible with Google Analytics so you can see which concerns your students are selecting most often. ConcernCenter is also Section 508 Americans with Disabilities Act compliant, so every student has the opportunity to get the support they need.

Click here to watch a short overview video of ConcernCenter.

All JED Campus Members receive the benefit of a 10% discount of a one-time fee or yearly subscription plan (at least a $1,000 value).
Please contact Erin Halligan-Avery, PhD, with inquiries and/or to set-up a demo of the platform:

Contact: Erin Halligan-Avery
Website: www.concerncenter.com

myPlaybook | Online Program for Student-Athletes

myPlaybook is a web-based program designed specifically to help student-athletes reach their full potential. Student-athletes encounter risks to their health and well-being on a daily basis. Common risks can include alcohol abuse, access to performance enhancing drugs, the stress of balancing academic and athletic commitments, and the challenge of healthy eating as a college student. myPlaybook will introduce simple, yet effective strategies to enhance the student-athlete experience.

Click here to access myPlaybook.

Help-Seeking and Access to Mental Health Care in a University Student Population

Eisenberg and colleagues explored how various factors are associated with help-seeking and access to mental health services in a university student population.  Results of a web-based survey to a random sample of 2785 students attending a large public university revealed that predictors of college students not receiving mental health care include: not perceiving a need for services, being unaware of available mental health services or insurance coverage, skepticism about the effectiveness of treatment, low socioeconomic status growing up, and identifying as Asian or Pacific Islander.  

Click here to read the full article through your institution’s access to Medical Care, published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

Seeking help from a mental health professional: The influence of one’s social network

ABSTRACT:
The decision to seek psychological help may be hindered or facilitated by many factors. Two potential factors that might facilitate help seeking are having a relationship with someone (a) who recommends seeking help or (b) who themselves have sought help. In two studies (N = 780, N = 746), we explored the relationship between these factors and intentions to seek mental health services. In Study 1, being prompted to seek help and knowing someone who had sought help were both related to positive expectations about mental health services. In Study 2, being prompted to seek help and knowing someone who had sought help were related to more positive attitudes toward help seeking. Also, knowing someone who had sought help was related to the intention to seek help. Of those who sought psychological help, approximately 75% had someone recommend that they seek help and about 94% knew someone who had sought help. J Clin Psychol 2007.

Click here to read the full article through your institution’s access to Wiley Online Library.

NIDA – National Institute on Drug Abuse

NIDA’s mission is to advance science on the causes and consequences of drug use and addiction and to apply that knowledge to improve individual and public health.

This involves:

  • Strategically supporting and conducting basic and clinical research on drug use (including nicotine), its consequences, and the underlying neurobiological, behavioral, and social mechanisms involved.
  • Ensuring the effective translation, implementation, and dissemination of scientific research findings to improve the prevention and treatment of substance use disorders and enhance public awareness of addiction as a brain disorder.

You can link the NIDA website on your school’s counseling and health service websites to increase help-seeking behavior, or use NIDA to inform your substance abuse policies.

CampusMHAP – Campus Mental Health Action Planning [JED]

CampusMHAP was developed in 2011 by The Jed Foundation (JED) and Education Development Center (EDC). The guide takes campuses through a step-by-step process for designing a plan to promote the mental health of all students and get help for students who are stressed, struggling, or distressed. A list of references and resources planners can consult for additional assistance is included at the end of the guide. CampusMHAP contains three sections:

  1. “Building Momentum and Infrastructure”
  2. “Engaging in a Strategic Planning Process”
  3. “Strategies for Promoting Mental Health and Preventing Suicide” – focuses on JED’s Comprehensive Approach

To view the CampusMHAP, click here.

Publicly available screening tools

The following screening tools are publicly accessible, and can be helpful resources to make available on your institution’s website. Click the links to download any of the screening tools below:

Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)
Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7) Scale
CAGE AID Assessment – a quick questionnaire to help determine whether an alcohol and/or other drug assessment is needed.

 

SBIRT – Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment by SAMHSA

SBIRT is a comprehensive, integrated, public health approach to the delivery of early intervention and treatment services for persons with substance use disorders, as well as those who are at risk of developing these disorders. Primary care centers, hospital emergency rooms, trauma centers, and other community settings provide opportunities for early intervention with at-risk substance users before more severe consequences occur.

  • Screening quickly assesses the severity of substance use and identifies the appropriate level of treatment.
  • Brief intervention focuses on increasing insight and awareness regarding substance use and motivation toward behavioral change.
  • Referral to treatment provides those identified as needing more extensive treatment with access to specialty care.

Click here to view more information about SBIRT on the SAMHSA website.

Balancing Safety and Support on Campus: A Guide for Campus Teams [JED]

This guide summarizes the existing literature on campus teams and suggests some of the key issues that should be considered when creating or managing a campus team. The guide may be particularly useful to new teams considering various options for how they should be organized and led, but should also be helpful to existing teams interested in assessing their current
functions, operations, or emphases. To make the guide as practical and accessible as possible, examples from existing campus teams and suggestions by an expert Advisory Board are included throughout this resource. An appendix includes links to additional resources and tools that could not be included in their entirety. The guide is organized into five sections:

• Team mission and purpose — choosing a scope and emphasis for your campus team
• Naming the team so that it accurately reflects mission and purpose
• Team composition, size and leadership
• Team functions — forming a team, developing policies and procedures, promoting a culture of caring, and ongoing team functions
• Common pitfalls and obstacles that teams can anticipate

To read the full guide, click here

Community Consultation and Intervention: Supporting Students Who Do Not Access Counseling Services

Although the severity of psychological problems among college students and the demand for campus counseling services has increased, many students who could benefit from mental health services still do not access them. This article describes Community Consultation and Intervention, a program designed to support students who are unlikely to access professional help despite the best efforts of traditional counseling center outreach. Community Consultation and Intervention reaches into the campus community to intervene by advising faculty and staff who may be the only contact for a distressed student, taking on a nontraditional “student support” role in direct interactions with students, offering advocacy when university systems or other environmental stressors precipitate psychological problems, and providing case management and crisis intervention services on behalf of the university when troubled students are especially concerning and disruptive to their communities. The most novel element of the program—the student support role—is distinct from conventional counseling in that it privileges problem solving, support, advice, and advocacy over focusing on emotions and other traditional mental health interventions. Case studies and programmatic challenges are described.

Click here to access the full article, published in the Journal of College Student Pyschotherapy in 2008, through your institution’s access with Taylor & Francis Online.

Comparison Table of Suicide Prevention Gatekeeper Training Programs by SPRC

This comparison table will help you find a gatekeeper training appropriate for your setting, the people you are trying to protect from suicide, and the people you want to train as gatekeepers. It is not a comprehensive list of gatekeeper trainings, but rather it includes the trainings in the Resources and Programs section of the SPRC website. It provides information on training objectives, audiences, training format and highlights, and links to the training developer’s website and the SPRC listing on the training.

Click here to view the full table, last updated July 2018.

Fresh Check Day

Fresh Check Day, is a mental health promotion and suicide prevention event that includes interactive expo booths, peer-to-peer messaging, support of multiple campus departments and groups, free food, entertainment, and exciting prizes and giveaways. Fresh Check Day aims to create an approachable and hopeful atmosphere where students are encouraged to engage in dialogue about mental health and helps to build a bridge between students and the mental health resources available on campus, in the community, and nationally.

Visit the Fresh Check Day website here.

Online programs for substance abuse education

JED Campus recommends that you provide messaging to your students about the risks and consequences of substance use/misuse. The following are programs you can use on your campus.

  • Vector Solutions- AlcoholEdu
    • Alcohol misuse doesn’t just put college students’ safety and health at risk, but greatly threatens the ability of colleges and universities to achieve their missions. And while today’s students are increasingly drinking less or not at all, alcohol and other drugs continue to negatively impact student well-being.
    • AlcoholEdu® for College is an interactive online program that uses the latest evidence-based prevention methods to create a highly engaging learning experience, inspiring students to make healthier decisions related to alcohol and other drugs.
    • This course has been taken by more than 11 million first-year college students since its launch in 2000.
    • Click here to learn more about the AlcoholEdu course. 
  • Additionally, you can view the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute (ADAI) Library Database to find more tools used for screening and assessment of substance use and substance use disorders.

Sample screening campaigns and programs

Below you will a list of example screening campaigns and programs. We hope this can be helpful to review as you work to implement these types of campaigns at your institution.

  1. University of California San Diego – “With A Little Help From Their Friends”.
  2. Drexel University – “A ‘Check-up from the Neck Up'”
  3. Montclair State University – “Self Help Screenings” 
  4. Southern Utah University – “Student Mental Health Resources” 

 

Set To Go [JED]

Set To Go is a JED Program focused on supporting the transition from high school to college and adulthood. For educators and college professionals, Set To Go provides tools and information for college choice and fit, the development of students’ emotional and life skills, and essential health information for success during the college transition.

Below are some key resources from the Set To Go website that you can use in your efforts to support college transition for your students:

Additionally, JED co-developed a special report with WebMD called Preparing For College: The Mental Health Gap that can be shared with parents of students.
For more information, click here to view the “For Educators” page on the Set To Go website.

 

MindWise Innovations — Mental Health Screening for Colleges

Campuses today offer a wealth of student support systems, including health and counseling centers, but students can often be hesitant to walk in the door.

This is where our online Screening Program offers a simple, confidential way for your students to check on their behavioral health and get connected to the resources you already have available.

Students take a short, online quiz to see if how they’re feeling matches common symptoms of conditions like anxiety, depression, substance use disorder, disordered eating, and more. All screens are anonymous, have been clinically validated, and provide immediate feedback.

To learn more about MindWise’s Screening Program click here. 

Sample programs & resources for the mental health of study abroad students

These schools have solid programs and resources for students who study abroad that you can reference when creating and/or updating your own.

Northwestern University: Undergraduate Learning Abroad
New York University (NYU): Health Letter to Parents of NYU Study Abroad Students

ULifeline [JED]

ULifeline is a project of The Jed Foundation (JED) dedicated to giving students and counselors access to specific resources accessible on their respective campuses. ULifeline includes a library of information on different mental health conditions focused on the university student experience, as well as giving school counselors analytics about how students access these resources.

ULifeline includes the “Self Evaluator,” which helps provide students with information about available resources at their school. The ULifeline Self Evaluator can become an invaluable resource towards your efforts to increase help-seeking behavior on your campus.

 

To sign up your school for the ULifeline program, register here.

Click here to view the ULifeline website.

Half of Us [JED]

Through Half of Us, mtvU and The Jed Foundation (JED) aim to initiate a public dialogue to raise awareness about the prevalence of mental health issues and connect students to the appropriate resources to get help. Half of Us resources are designed to decrease the stigma around mental health and encourage help-seeking through online videos, resources, and toolkits.

Click here to visit the Half of Us website.

NAMI – National Alliance on Mental Illness

NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, is the nation’s largest grassroots mental health organization dedicated to building better lives for the millions of Americans affected by mental illness. Offered in thousands of communities across the United States through NAMI State Organizations and NAMI Affiliates, NAMI education programs ensure hundreds of thousands of families, individuals and educators get the support and information they need. NAMI shapes national public policy for people with mental illness and their families and provides volunteer leaders with the tools, resources and skills necessary to save mental health in all states. The toll-free NAMI HelpLine allows NAMI to respond personally to hundreds of thousands of requests each year, providing free referral, information and support—a much-needed lifeline for many. Public awareness events and activities, including Mental Illness Awareness Week and NAMIWalks, successfully fight stigma and encourage understanding. NAMI works with reporters on a daily basis to make sure our country understands how important mental health is.

Click here to access the NAMI website.
Click here to view NAMI’s infographic and fact sheet library.

Active Minds

Active Minds is a national leader for young adult mental health advocacy and suicide prevention. Headquartered in Washington, DC, Active Minds brings the voice of young people who are disproportionately affected by mental illnesses and the way mental health is addressed on campuses and in society at large.

Active Minds is at more than 600 colleges and high schools nationwide, including 450 student-led chapters. Active Minds programs and services empower students to reduce the stigma surrounding mental health, create communities of support, and ultimately save lives.

Click here to visit the Active Minds website.

Click here to read Active Minds’ one-pager on supporting high-achieving students.

Examining Characteristics of Resilience among University Students: An International Study

Attending university is a particularly stressful time due to unique emergent stressors such as changes in environment, loss or diminishment of social support networks, academic pressures, developing peer relationships, and financial management. There is growing recognition that these common stressors may have deleterious effects on the mental health of students. Resilience, a personality characteristic that moderates the negative effects of stress and promotes adaptation, has been associated with increased psychological well-being. Despite a growing body of research on resilience and its clinical significance in preventing mental health problems, relatively little is known about contributing factors for resilience in well-adjusted university students. This current study examined the characteristics of university students reporting high and low resilience for elucidating its clinical implications in preventing mental health problem, primarily focusing on potentially modifiable psychosocial variables. An international sample of 214 university students recruited from Australia, the United States of America, and Hong Kong universities completed measures of resilience, perceived social support, campus connectedness, and psychological distress. Results of a one-way between groups multivariate analysis of variance revealed that perceived social support, campus connectedness, and psychological distress accounted for a significant proportion (36%) of the variance between the high and low resilience groups of university students. University students with low levels of resilience reported significantly lower levels of perceived social support, campus connectedness, and higher levels of psychological distress, in comparison to university students with high levels of resilience. Findings offer important implications for the development of resilience-based interventions among university students.

Published in August 2014 in the Open Journal of Social Sciences.
Click here to read the full study.

Emotional Intelligence – Implications for Personal, Social, Academic, and Workplace Success

This article presents an overview of the ability model of emotional intelligence and includes a discussion about how and why the concept became useful in both educational and workplace settings. We review the four underlying emotional abilities comprising emotional intelligence and the assessment tools that that have been developed to measure the construct. A primary goal is to provide a review of the research describing the correlates of emotional intelligence. We describe what is known about how emotionally intelligent people function both intra- and interpersonally and in both academic and workplace settings. Published in 2011 in the Social and Personality Psychology Compass.

Click here to read the full article.

Why college freshmen need to take Emotions 101

“Too many college students face challenges for which they are emotionally ill-equipped to handle. In fact, suicide is the second leading cause of death for college students. In this piece, from OpEd Project’s Yale Public Voices Fellowship program, two mental health experts and program fellows explain how colleges and universities can better deal with the problem of student anxiety and depression. It was written by Diana Divecha, a developmental psychologist and research affiliate of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence, and Robin Stern, a psychoanalyst and associate director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence.”

Click here to read the full article.

Penn Resilience Program and PERMA Workshops

The Penn Resilience Program (PRP) and PERMA™ Workshops are evidence-based training programs that have been demonstrated to build resilience, well-being, and optimism. These strengths-based prevention programs equip individuals with a set of practical skills that can be applied in everyday life to strengthen an individual’s ability to overcome adversity and challenges, manage stress, and thrive in their personal and professional life.

Click here to read more about PRP and PERMA™.

SCoRE – Student Curriculum on Resilience Education

SCoRE® (Student Curriculum on Resilience Education®) is a research-based resilience education program that helps students cope with the personal, social, and academic challenges of college life. The curriculum was developed by 3C Institute and LEAD Pittsburgh in collaboration with ten colleges and universities and is available as either an instructor-led or self-paced course.

Click here to read more about SCoRE.®

Consequences of Receipt of a Psychiatric Diagnosis for Completion of College

This study provides new data on DSM-IV diagnoses associated with the failure to complete postsecondary education. The findings suggest that psychiatric factors play a significant role in college academic performance, and the benefits of prevention, detection, and treatment of psychiatric illness may therefore include higher college graduation rates.

Read the full study here.

Social Support and Mental Health Among College Students

Research suggests that loneliness and isolation are risk factors for suicide, suicidal behavior and mental health problems, while supportive social relationships serve as protective factors against these outcomes.  The authors also suggest that experiencing a higher quality of social supports is more protective than having a large number of social contacts. Further, minority students, international students and those with low socioeconomic status are at greater risk of social isolation.  This information may help administrators and health providers identify these students and develop programs that that address these issues. Published in 2009 in the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry. 

Click here to purchase the full article.

Sample programs for supporting students with physical, learning, and other disabilities

Schools should consider thinking strategically about supporting students with disabilities on their campus. The following schools have good programs to support social connectedness for students with accessibility needs. Remember to view all of JED’s recommendations about promoting social connectedness on your campus.

University of Washington – DO-IT
DO-IT (Disabilities, Opportunities, Internetworking, and Technology) serves to increase the successful participation of individuals with disabilities in challenging academic programs such as those in science, engineering, mathematics, and technology. Primary funding for DO-IT is provided by the National Science Foundation, the State of Washington, and the U.S. Department of Education. DO-IT is a collaboration of UW Information Technology and the Colleges of Engineering and Education at the University of Washington.

University of Iowa – UI REACH (Realizing Educational and Career Hopes)
Syracuse University – Disability Cultural Center

NCLD – National Center for Learning Disabilities

The mission of NCLD is to improve the lives of the 1 in 5 children and adults nationwide with learning and attention issues—by empowering parents and young adults, transforming schools and advocating for equal rights and opportunities. Founded in 1977 by Carrie and Pete Rozelle as the Foundation for Children with Learning Disabilities, the organization provided leadership, public awareness and grants to support research and innovative practices in learning disabilities.

Click here to view the NCLD website.

ARHE – Association of Recovery in Higher Education

The Association of Recovery in Higher Education (ARHE) is the only association exclusively representing collegiate recovery programs (CRPs) and collegiate recovery communities (CRCs), the faculty and staff who support them, and the students who represent them. ARHE provides education, resources, and community connection needed to help change the trajectory of recovering student’s lives.

A collegiate recovery program (CRP) is a supportive environment within the campus culture that reinforces the decision to disengage from addictive behavior. It is designed to provide an educational opportunity alongside recovery support to ensure that students do not have to sacrifice one for the other.

Click here to view the ARHE website.

Sample programs for supporting international students

Schools should consider thinking strategically about supporting international students on their campus. The following schools have good programs to support social connectedness for international students. Remember to view all of JED’s recommendations about promoting social connectedness on your campus.

Michigan State University – Office for International Students and Scholars

Campus Pride

Campus Pride serves LGBTQ and ally student leaders and campus organizations in the areas of leadership development, support programs and services to create safer, more inclusive LGBTQ-friendly colleges and universities. It exists to develop, support and give “voice and action” in building future LGBTQ and ally student leaders.

Visit the Campus Pride website by clicking here.

Using A Public Health Approach to Address Student Mental Health

This chapter, adapted from JED and EDC’s Campus Mental Health Action Planning (CampusMHAP) guide, provides additional information about supporting the mental wellness of all students on your campus. To read a copy of the chapter, click the link below:

Mental health care in the college community – Using A Public Health Approach to Address Student Mental Health

Sample programs for supporting veterans and military-connected students

Schools should consider thinking strategically about supporting veterans and military-connected students on their campus. The following schools have good programs to support social connectedness for veterans. Remember to view all of JED’s recommendations about promoting social connectedness on your campus.

Cabrillo College: Veterans Information Center
Northwestern University: Student Veterans’ Resources
Rutgers University | Newark: Resources for Student Veterans
New York Institute of Technology (NYIT): Student Veterans Resources
University of Washington: Teaching Student Veterans

The VA Campus Toolkit

The VA Campus Toolkit provides faculty, staff, and administrators resources to support student veterans. The Post 9/11 GI Bill is bringing student veterans to campuses in record numbers. The aim of this toolkit is to help campuses welcome these men and women by recognizing who they are, and understanding their unique experiences, adjustments, and needs.

Click here to read more about the VA Campus Toolkit.

The VA Campus Toolkit also includes the Veterans Integration to Academic Leadership (VITAL) Initiative. The VITAL Initiative exists to enhance academic retention and success through on-campus clinical care and coordination, and improved understanding of veterans’ unique strengths and challenges through education and training.

Click here to read more about VITAL.

College Parents Matter (Maryland Collaborative)

This online tool center provides an array of resources to help parents’ ongoing communication with their children during their time in college that is developmentally appropriate, and can help their student make rational decisions regarding college drinking and related problems.

Navigate to the College Parents Matter website by clicking here.

Bystander Intervention Resources [NSVRC]

This resource portal, created by the National Sexual Violence Resource Center (NSVRC), offers advocates and preventionists information and resources on bystander intervention. It includes resources to use with community members, as well as information and research on the effectiveness of bystander intervention.

Click here to access the resource portal on the NSVRC website.

Change IS Possible: Reducing High-Risk Drinking Using a Collaborative Improvement Model

Published in January 2015 in the Journal of American College Health, below you can view a summary and a link to view the full article through your institution’s login:

To describe the adoption of public health and improvement methodologies to address college students’ high-risk drinking behaviors and to aid in prevention efforts.Members of 32 colleges and universities, content experts, and staff members of the National College Health Improvement Program (NCHIP). A 2-year learning collaborative developed by NCHIP trained individuals from 32 different college and universities in using the Plan-Do-Study-Act cycle as a method to create and implement initiatives aimed at reducing students’ high-risk drinking behaviors and related harms. Participants experienced success ranging from noteworthy increases in type and amount of interventions directed at reducing high-risk drinking, to creating collaboratives across campus, the local community, and stakeholders. Challenges related to data collection and creating lasting cultural change remain. The use of quality improvement methodologies and creation of a national collaborative successfully effected meaningful change in high-risk drinking behaviors on college campuses.

Click here to access the article through your institution’s access to Taylor and Francis Online.

The Academic Opportunity Costs of Substance Abuse During College

Published in May 2013 from the Center of Young Adult Health and Development (CYAHD), you can view the summary and a link to view the full report, below:

Summary

Excessive drinking and drug use remain significant problems on many college campuses. Contrary to the popular perception that substance use is a “normal” rite of passage endemic to the college experience, the more likely scenario—according to research evidence—is that it undermines students’ ability to succeed academically. Given the new research evidence, it behooves college leaders to recognize the connection between alcohol and drug use and academic retention, readiness and motivation to succeed, and view substance use prevention and intervention as a viable strategy to promote student success. More attention should be focused on identifying existing successful intervention models and designing innovative comprehensive approaches to promote student success.

Click here to view the full report.

Behavior Concerns Advice Line by the University of Texas at Austin

The Behavior Concerns Advice Line (BCAL) by the University of Texas at Austin is a good system for identifying and supporting disconnected and/or isolated students that you can reference when creating and/or updating your own. BCAL is a service that provides The University of Texas at Austin’s faculty, students and staff an opportunity to discuss their concerns about another individual’s behavior. This service is a partnership among the Office of the Dean of Students, the Counseling and Mental Health Center (CMHC), the Employee Assistance Program (EAP) and The University of Texas Police Department (UTPD). An individual can either call the line at 512-232-5050 or report their concerns using the online submission form.

For more information on BCAL, click here.

40 Money Management Tips Every College Student Should Know

This guide, developed by the National Endowment for Financial Education (NEFE), gives tools for managing finances as a young adult, and covers issues related to checking accounts, financial aid, jobs, dorm life, apartments, information on cutting expenses, managing credit and debt and saving and investing money.

Click here to read the full guide.

Electronic reporting software solutions

The following software solutions can be utilized to create a centralized electronic reporting system for reporting students of concern, which are good examples for creating a system of identifying and supporting disconnected and/or isolated students. Be sure to also view all of JED’s recommendations regarding identifying students at risk and promoting social connectedness:

Maxient Software
Symplicity’s Advocate System
Pharos Resources

Campus Connect | A Suicide Prevention Training for Gatekeepers

Developed by the Syracuse University Counseling Center, Campus Connect is a gatekeeper training program for college and university faculty, staff, and students. The experientially based training is designed to enhance participant’s knowledge, awareness, and skills concerning college student suicide. Specifically, Campus Connect aims to increase participant’s knowledge about suicide statistics, risk and protective factors, warning signs, and referral resources; to increase empathic listening skills, communication skills, and the ability to ask individuals if they are thinking about suicide; and to increase self-awareness concerning the potential emotional reactions gatekeepers may experience when interacting with students in crisis.

For more information, you can read the full description on the SPRC website.

Curricular infusion at JED Campuses

The following JED Campus Strategic Plan updates and news articles give good examples of curricular infusion at multiple JED Campuses:

Santa Clara University – SCU JED Newsletter August 2018

SCU shares a unique integration of student coursework into campus-wide educational campaigns to promote emotional well-being.

University of South California – USC pilots new course about health and wellness

“OT 299, ‘THRIVE: Foundations of Well-Being,’ teaches students a variety of wellness skills, from stress management techniques to tips for making friends in college. While the course will be geared toward first-year students in the future, it is currently being introduced to all students.”
(Daily Trojan, August 2018)

Hamilton College – Mental Health Support Skills & Strategies

A Class of 2019 Hamilton undergraduate develops a permanent course to be offered through the college’s physical education wellness program.

University of Pennsylvania

7 Hours a Week on Existential Despair: This Inside Higher Ed article describes new course at UPenn called “Existential Despair,” as well as a number of other classes at other institutions.
Penn Will Be First Top Law School Requiring Attorney Mental Health Training: “Penn will be the first top law school to require attorney mental health training for students. Penn Law will launch a pilot program this spring to integrate sessions on attorney well-being into mandatory coursework, making it the first top-ranked law school in the country to do so.”
Columbia journalism prof. Stephen Fried will teach mental health writing next semester: “Fried’s class will be one of the first undergraduate courses of its kind on mental health writing in the country.”

 

Sample programs that promote tolerance and inclusiveness

To promote social connectedness on your campus, we recommend enhancing programs, activities, and campaigns that promote tolerance and inclusiveness. You can view a list below of school programs that you can use in planning similar efforts on your campus:

A Randomized Controlled Trial of Koru: A Mindfulness Program for College Students and Other Emerging Adults

This study, published in 2014 in the Journal of American College Health, concludes in results that support the effectiveness of the Koru program for emerging adults in the university setting. Participants of the study showed improvements in perceived stress, sleep problems, mindfulness, and self-compassion.

Click here to view the full study.
Click here to view a summary graphic of the study.

 

Love Is Louder [JED]

A project of The Jed Foundation (JED), Love Is Louder began in 2010 to amplify a simple message – love and support are louder than any voice that tries to bring us down. 

Love is Louder is a community wanting to turn message into action—individuals and communities all over the globe committing to taking actions that make us all feel more connected and supported.

Click here to learn more about Love is Louder.

Community Building Program Resources for RAs

The following programs and organizations provide resources for resident assistants (RAs) and residential life programming that will aid your efforts towards social connectedness:

  • ResidentAssistant.com – Forum for sharing and getting ideas about Resident Assistant programming
  • Reslife.net – Provides free content to housing staff and resident assistants  

C2C – Connect2Complete

Connect2Complete is a service learning and peer advocacy program developed for community colleges. The C2C strategy encourages academic, personal, and social development, as well as development of students’ cultural identity and critical civic consciousness—all key factors for student persistence.

Click to read more about Connect2Complete on the Campus Compact website.

 

Promoting Resiliency Among First-Generation College Students

This study explores means of managing first generation college student attrition—looking at the risk factors for attrition such as academic preparation, financial strain, identity and social capital—by offering the following recommendations: making university systems apparent, promoting student mentoring, training faculty towards first generation college student retention, recognizing the positive attributes of first generation students status towards identity, and including and respecting families.

You can view the study here from the Penn State University Division of Undergraduate Studies website.

Factors Promoting Positive Adaptation and Resilience During the Transition to College

Results from this study revealed that social support significantly predicted lower stress among students. The authors argue that putting an emphasis on programs for first year students that emphasize the importance of social connectedness would increase students’ academic and social-emotional adjustment in college.

Click here to view the full study.

Problem Solving Moderates the Effects of Life Event Stress and Chronic Stress on Suicidal Behaviors in Adolescence

Developing problem-solving abilities may buffer the negative impact of stress in regard to suicidal ideation. This study’s findings are consistent with a problem-solving deficit diathesis-stress model, in which adolescents who have difficulty generating and implementing solutions to problems are at a heightened risk of suicidal behaviors when they experience stress.

Click here to access the article through your institution’s Wiley Online Library subscription.

Connectedness and Suicide Prevention in Adolescents: Pathways and Implications

This research defines connectedness as “the degree to which an individual (or group) possesses a subjective sense of emotional interrelatedness (belonging, caring, value, and trust) and a willingness to share with and seek resources from the individuals and communities in which he/she is socially or geographically embedded.” From this definition, this review describes the effects of student connectedness to peers, as well as to adults who are perceived as supportive and engaged, in reducing STB (suicide thoughts and behaviors).

Click here to access the article through your institution’s subscription to Wiley Online Library.

Changes in Adult Attachment Styles in American College Students Over Time: A Meta-Analysis

This research, published in 2014 by the Personality and Social Psychology Review, looks into recent student changes in attachment styles (defined in the study as Secure, Dismissing, Preoccupied, and Fearful). Percentages of students with Dismissing, Preoccupied, and Fearful styles have increased, while the percentage of students with Secure styles have decreased. At the same time, college students’ positive views of others have also decreased. The study looks into implications and possible explanations.

Click here to view the full article through your institutional access to SAGE Journals.

New Data on the Nature of Suicidal Crises in College Students: Shifting the Paradigm

In this study, researchers at the University of Texas at Austin contend for the entire administrative structure of a university “to become engaged with the problem of suicidality and to implement policies and programs to reduce suicide by intervening at all points…” This study will demonstrate evidence for implementing campus-wide engagement in promoting mental health and suicide prevention measures.

You can purchase the full article by clicking here.

Know Wit All by Wentworth Institute of Technology

The Division of Student Affairs at Wentworth Institute of Technology launched a podcast series called Know WIT All. The podcast is designed for first year students and their families to assist in their transition to college life. While some subject matters may be specific to WIT, hopefully the podcast becomes constructive in efforts to Develop Life Skills on your campus.

Topics for the Know WIT All podcasts include:

academic expectations in college
connecting with faculty
what is co-op?
academic advising
stress management
budgeting and working while in school
alcohol and drug use
navigating the city
homesickness
anxiety
how to schedule a medical appointment

Click to listen to the Know Wit All podcast on SoundCloud.

Transcripts for the episodes may be requested by emailing [email protected].

School research on university-sponsored health insurance

The University of Washington’s Director of Health Promotion did research with students in public health and put together this amazing slide deck with data, testimonials and why it’s important that they consider JED’s recommendation to implement an insurance plan for all full-time students.

Click below to view the presentation for examples and insights into implementing an insurance plan for all full-time students on your campus.

UW SHIP Presentation: June 2018

CAMS – Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality

CAMS is first and foremost a clinical philosophy of care. Developed 30 years ago, it is a therapeutic framework for suicide-specific assessment and treatment of a patient’s suicidal risk. Multiple clinical trials in the U.S. and internationally have proven the effectiveness of CAMS. It is a flexible approach that can be used across theoretical orientations and disciplines for a wide range of suicidal patients across treatment settings and modalities.

Home Page for CAMS

ASSIP – Attempted Suicide Short Intervention Program

Attempted suicide is the main risk factor for suicide. The Attempted Suicide Short Intervention Program (ASSIP) described in this manual is an innovative brief therapy that has proven in published clinical trials to be highly effective in reducing the risk of further attempts. ASSIP is the result of the authors’ extensive practical experience in the treatment of suicidal individuals. The emphasis is on the therapeutic alliance with the suicidal patient, based on an initial patient-oriented narrative interview. The four therapy sessions are followed by continuing contact with patients by means of regular letters.

This clearly structured manual starts with an overview of suicide and suicide prevention, followed by a practical, step-by-step description of this highly structured treatment. It includes numerous checklists, handouts, and standardized letters for use by health professionals in various clinical settings.

ASSIP Manual

 

Sample programming for bystander training, sexual assault & conflict resolution

Below you will find school programming and resources that can help with conflict resolution, sexual assault and bystander training.  These programs can be implemented across campus through clinical and non-clinical staff such as health educators and student affairs staff.  An increased focus on life skills development may also ease the burden on counseling centers, as it might limit or prevent some problems from emerging in ways that require clinical care.

George Mason University’s Conflict Resolution Resource

The Green Dot Strategy at University of Kentucky

SUNY Geneseo’s Healthy Relationships Resource

Michigan State University’s Sexual Assault Program

Towson University’s Sexual Assault Guide

Louisiana State University Sexual Assault Resources

Sample programs & resources for emotional management & resiliency

An increased focus on life skills development may ease the burden on counseling centers, as it might limit or prevent some problems from emerging in ways that require clinical care. Similar programs can be implemented across campus through clinical and non-clinical staff such as health educators and student affairs staff. These schools have solid programs that help to support student resiliency and emotional management.

University of Wisconsin – At the Heart-Understanding and Managing Emotions

University of Texas – Managing Difficult Emotions Resource

Kansas State University – University Life Cafe: The Bookshelf

Yale’s Mood Meter

Sample medical amnesty policies

These schools have solid medical amnesty policies that you can reference when creating and/or updating your own.  JED’s recommendations regarding medical amnesty policies are:

The policy includes:

  • Assurance that students who utilize emergency services or report a friend who is in need of emergency services due to intoxication and/or potential overdose will be subject to minimal or no disciplinary sanctions
  • An education/prevention/treatment response that includes clinical follow-up
  • Amnesty exclusion criteria for students who have utilized emergency services more than a certain number of times
  • The policy will be well publicized in the student handbook, faculty handbook, publicly in the residence halls, if applicable, and within three clicks of the school homepage

William and Mary’s Good Griffin Policy (formerly Medical Amnesty)

Florida State’s Medical Amnesty Policy

Towson University Responsible Tiger Protocol Amnesty Program

Intervene Bystander Training Program by Cornell Health

The Skorton Center for Health Initiatives at Cornell Health, in collaboration with the Cornell Interactive Theater Ensemble, has developed a new bystander intervention video and workshop called Intervene © 2016.

Intervene is both a 20 minute video and a 60 minute workshop that are:

  • based on real-life situations faced by students at Cornell and beyond
  • grounded in social behavior theories and public health research
  • developed and evaluated by the Skorton Center at Cornell Health

Intervene was designed to be used among undergraduate, graduate, and professional college students. Secondary audiences for Intervene include university staff, faculty, parents, alumni, and other academic institutions. The following resources are available from Cornell to the public at no cost, in the collaborative spirit of cultivating college health and well-being:

Interactive Screening Program by AFSP

The Interactive Screening Program (ISP) is an online program utilized by mental health services at institutions of higher education, law enforcement agencies, workplaces, and Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs). ISP provides a safe and confidential way for individuals to take a brief screening for stress, depression, and other mental health conditions, and receive a personalized response from a caring mental health counselor.

Even when people know about available mental health services, shame, fear, and embarrassment often prevent them from seeking help.  Through your ISP website, individuals can anonymously communicate with a mental health professional to receive recommendations, feedback, and support for connecting to available mental health services.

Listed in the Best Practice Registry for Suicide Prevention, ISP is being used by college and university counseling centers, medical and professional degree schools, hospital networks, corporations and Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs), connecting thousands of people to help they would not have sought otherwise.

Click to navigate directly to ISP for Institutions of Higher Education.

AFSP – American Foundation for Suicide Prevention

Established in 1987, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) is a voluntary health organization that gives those affected by suicide a nationwide community empowered by research, education and advocacy to take action against this leading cause of death.

AFSP is dedicated to saving lives and bringing hope to those affected by suicide.  AFSP creates a culture that’s smart about mental health by engaging in the following core strategies:

  • Funding scientific research
  • Educating the public about mental health and suicide prevention
  • Advocating for public policies in mental health and suicide prevention
  • Supporting survivors of suicide loss and those affected by suicide in our mission

The AFSP website has many resources that can be applied to the college setting.

College Re-Entry Program by Fountain House

Based in NYC, College Re-Entry helps academically engaged 18-30 year-old college students, who withdraw from their studies due to mental health challenges, return to college and successfully reach their educational goals. Their expertise lies in helping students build and implement an action plan to get back to college and develop capacities to do well, both in and outside of the classroom. The Core Program begins with an integrated 14-week (15 hours per week) curriculum that helps a small cohort of students regain academic skills, restore physical wellness, and reclaim social community. Students have the opportunity to work with expert instructors in classes aimed at introducing and strengthening practical skills needed to succeed.

This is a great program for students looking to return to college after taking a medical leave.

Learn more at www.collegereentry.org

TAO – Therapy Assistance Online

TAO is a robust behavioral health digital solution that many institutions are using to augment their own services. The TAO tools and platform were built to meet many students’ skill development & educational needs in well-being and behavioral health.

TAO can be used to provide self-help when students need support and education for common issues, and to provide professionally guided help when the student’s problems require a higher level of care. The TAO platform includes a measure of resilience that allows administrators to track the utilization and effectiveness of the tools in various use cases on campus.

Click here to learn more about TAO – Therapy Assistance Online.

My College Transition

Emery Bergmann, a freshman at Cornell University in the fall of 2017, submitted a video project for her Intro to Digital Media course that went viral on YouTube, providing a context and space for students across the country to express their empathy and relate to the feelings of isolation and loneliness that so often come with the college transition. Since the video’s posting, Emery has gone to share her work with universities and their freshmen, win film festival awards, and write an article for the New York Times.

To view Emery’s video, click here.
To view Emery’s NYT article, click here.

YOU at College

YOU at College connects students to the right resources at the right time to build resilience, increase mental health literacy, and encourage help seeking behaviors to prevent suicide. As a student-centric digital platform, YOU centralizes and personalizes online evidence-based/supported and campus well-being resources to support the comprehensive student experience to avoid crises prior to their development.

YOU at College is a digital platform designed to foster health and well-being for each and every student. The portal connects students to customized resources to increase self-awareness and resilience to prevent the development of academic, physical, and mental health crises. YOU was developed through a public-private partnership with Colorado State University to address the overwhelming increase in utilization of counseling center services, the issue of suicide on college campuses, and the overall pressures negatively impacting the mental health and well-being of today’s college students. Content within YOU is customized for your campus and optimized to connect each unique student with online evidence-based/supported and campus resources that match their unique identities and current challenges through a student completed profile and proprietary screening tools within the platform. Since its development in 2015, You at College has grown to include campus partners across the country including public, private, professional, and community colleges ranging in size from 200 – 60,000+ students.

All JED Campus Members receive the benefit of waived customization fees (a $3,000-$5,000 value).

To learn more and to request a demo please refer to their main page: YOU at College: Main Product Page

YOU at College: White Paper — College Student Well-Being Hub Promotes Student Success, Resilience, and Mental Health

Garage Barrier Project

The College of New Jersey (TCNJ), a JED Campus, has shared a proposal they received from Environetics, an architecture firm, for building barriers on parking garages. This is a good example of a means restriction measure that campuses can take to mitigate risk of suicide attempts. The proposal includes three options for securing elevated garages.

Download the garage barrier proposal.

SMART Recovery

SMART Recovery is an abstinence-based, not-for-profit organization with a sensible self-help program for people having problems with drinking and using. It includes many ideas and techniques to help you change your life from one that is self-destructive and unhappy to one that is constructive and satisfying. SMART Recovery is not a spin-off of Alcoholics Anonymous. SMART Recovery is a meeting-based, mental health and educational program, focused on changing human behavior related to alcohol and drug use. Facilitators can be trained for a small fee and then access handbooks to use in the facilitation of group meetings.

Visit the SMART Recovery website.

Promoting healthy transition to college through mindfulness training with first-year college students: Pilot randomized controlled trial

This research article focuses on mindfulness and its effect on the well-being of first-year students during their transition to college. Goals of the program include enhancing students’ emotion regulation skills, introducing simple mindfulness techniques so that students may better manage stressful situations, and facilitating the learning process in a supportive, group environment.

Abstract:

Objective: Given the importance of developmental transitions on young adults’ lives and the high rates of mental health issues among U.S. college students, first-year college students can be particularly vulnerable to stress and adversity. This pilot study evaluated the effectiveness and feasibility of mindfulness training aiming to promote first-year college students’ health and wellbeing.
Participants: 109 freshmen were recruited from residential halls (50% Caucasian, 66% female). Data collection was completed in November 2014.
Methods: A randomized control trial was conducted utilizing the Learning to BREATHE (L2B) program, a universal mindfulness program adapted to match the developmental tasks of college transition.
Results: Participation in the pilot intervention was associated with significant increase in students’ life satisfaction, and significant decrease in depression and anxiety. Marginally significant decrease was found for sleep issues and alcohol consequences.
Conclusions: Mindfulness-based programs may be an effective strategy to enhance a healthy transition into college.

Click here to access the article with your institution’s access to Taylor and Francis Online.

Online Suicide Risk Screening and Intervention With College Students

This pilot randomized controlled trial examined the effect of an online intervention for college students at risk for suicide, Electronic Bridge to Mental Health Services (eBridge), which included personalized feedback and optional online counseling delivered in accordance with motivational interviewing principles. Primary outcomes were readiness to seek information or talk with family and friends about mental health treatment, readiness to seek mental health treatment, and actual treatment linkage.

Abstract:

Method: Participants were 76 college students (45 women, 31 men; mean age = 22.9 years, SD = 5.0 years) at a large public university who screened positive for suicide risk, defined by at least 2 of the following: suicidal thoughts, history of suicide attempt, depression, and alcohol abuse. Racial/ethnic self-identifications were primarily Caucasian (n = 54) and Asian (n = 21). Students were randomized to eBridge or the control condition (personalized feedback only, offered in plain report format). Outcomes were measured at 2-month follow-up.
Results: Despite relatively modest engagement in online counseling (29% of students posted ≥1 message), students assigned to eBridge reported significantly higher readiness for help-seeking scores, especially readiness to talk to family, talk to friends, and see a mental health professional. Students assigned to eBridge also reported lower stigma levels and were more likely to link to mental health treatment.
Conclusions: Findings suggest that offering students personalized feedback and the option of online counseling, using motivational interviewing principles, has a positive impact on students’ readiness to consider and engage in mental health treatment. Further research is warranted to determine the robustness of this effect, the mechanism by which improved readiness and treatment linkage occurs, and the longer term impact on student mental health outcomes.

Click here to purchase the full article.

Sample medical history forms

Proactively requesting medical history information inclusive of mental health and substance use can help early identification of students at risk and allow the school to provide information about mental health resources on campus, aiding the transition to college. JED Campus suggests specifically asking if students have mental health or substance use histories and if they are currently receiving treatment for either issue. Below are example medical history forms that you are welcome to use as examples when developing or updating your own.

Prescription Stimulant Medication Misuse, Abuse and Diversion: A Survey of College Students’ Behaviors, Attitudes, and Perceptions

This study was conducted by the University of Washington Center for the Study of Health and Risk Behaviors in partnership with NASPA and the Coalition for the Prevention of ADHD Medication Misuse (CPAMM).  This slide deck and summary fact sheet detail the findings from the study which drew random samples of students from 7 campuses. The results highlight potential correlations between other risky behaviors and stimulant misuse as well as details groups of students who may be more likely than others to misuse stimulants.

Download slide deck.

Examining the Relationships Between Resilience, Mental Health, and Academic Persistence in Undergraduate College Students

This article in the Journal of American College Health, the relationships between measures of interpersonal resilience, intrapersonal resilience, and mental health were examined with respect to academic and social integration, key determinants of academic persistence.

Abstract:

Participants: A sample (n = 605) of undergraduate students was recruited from 2 midwestern universities during the 2007–2008 academic year.
Methods: Hierarchal (or sequential) regression analysis examined whether the inter- and intrapersonal resilience and mental health measures contributed to explaining variance in the response variables of university cumulative grade point average (GPA) and university sense of belonging.
Results: The intrapersonal resilience factors contributed to explaining variance in cumulative GPA in addition to aptitude and achievement. Furthermore, there was a strong statistical correlation between the inter- and intrapersonal resilience factors and mental health.
Conclusions: The demands in college are significant and there is a need for more research on the concept of resilience as it relates to college health and academic persistence.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s subscription to Taylor and Francis Online.

Environmental scan checklists by JED Campus schools

JED Campus recommends that schools should conduct an annual environmental scan to identify risks for access to lethal means and create a plan to mitigate these risks.

The following checklist was adapted from a tool used by the University of South Carolina and can be distributed to colleagues who may be assisting with the environmental scan.

Click here to view the Environmental Scan Checklist by UofSC.

In addition, if you would like to utilize UofSC’s checklist as a Google Form, please click here.

A longer environmental scan was created by Gonzaga University (which is a working draft as of November 2018; to provide feedback, please email [email protected]).

Click here to view the Environmental Scan Worksheet by Gonzaga.

Sample destigmatization campaigns

Below are a collection of destigmatization campaigns that JED Campuses and other schools have successfully created and implemented.
We hope they are helpful as you seek to do similar work on your campuses.

Additionally, you can also click the following link to read about effective messaging strategies to fight stigma from the American Psychiatric Association.

Sample memoranda of understanding documents (MOUs)

JED Campus recommends that IHEs develop or refine memoranda of understanding (MOUs) with local emergency and mental health services that they regularly interact with or rely on in the pursuit of well-coordinated access to care. Below are sample MOUs that you can use as models in developing your own:

 

Considerations for developing an MOU with a local emergency service:

  • It is important for emergency room personnel to make all reasonable attempts to have a student sign a release to notify the school when the student is treated in the emergency department or is admitted to the hospital
    • It is important for emergency room personnel to encourage students to sign a release to communicate with the school, especially if the student is hoping to return to school upon discharge.  This way the school understands the student’s status and needs and can work with the student to effectively re-engage them on campus. Emergency room personnel and the designated contact at the college’s counseling center need to discuss discharge planning prior to the student’s discharge in order to determine whether the student can be serviced on campus or will require a referral to a community provider.
  • Designate a point person on campus as the contact person for communication with the hospital
    • If the school initiates a student hospitalization, this point person is responsible for sending the student to the emergency room with appropriate documentation (i.e. referral and insurance information) and the contact information for the school’s point person.
  • Negotiate a plan to avoid discharging students at odd hours (i.e. in the middle of the night) when few resources are available to help with transition back to campus
  • If possible, develop an arrangement whereby students are fast-tracked in emergency room

 

Considerations for developing an MOU with community mental health providers

  • If possible, develop an arrangement for provider to expedite seeing students referred from the school.  You may establish a relationship with several providers who can be relied upon to accommodate situations in which a student needs to be seen quickly and who are willing to accept students who are considered high-risk
  • Negotiate a plan for provider to offer a sliding scale fee or a reduced fee when necessary for students referred from the school
  • Community clinicians need to be informed and sensitive around student schedules.  For example, have the ability to accommodate/reschedule sessions during exam times and maintain flexibility about sessions missed because of school vacation or summer break
  • It is valuable to identify providers within specific specialty areas-especially those that may complement the staffing profile of the campus service (e.g., substance abuse, trauma, eating disorders, borderline personality disorder and sexual identity concern specialists)
  • As part of the agreement, develop a  tracking system for students who are considered high-risk as well as a plan for providers to communicate student emergencies to the school’s counseling center, with the consent of the student
  • Determine a plan with community providers to establish a communication plan that facilitates collaborative care between the community provider and the school (i.e. medication management, therapy, disability services, etc.)
  • Designate methods and protocols for communication between counseling center staff and community providers
  • Provide an opportunity for community therapists and clinic staff to come to campus annually to meet with counseling and health center staff to develop ongoing working relationships – this is a valuable chance to get to know the local providers and to update them on campus trends and college mental health issues

 

Additional guidelines for creating MOUs

CPAMM – The Coalition to Prevent ADHD Medication Misuse

CPAMM works to help prevent the misuse, abuse and diversion of prescription stimulant medication, with an initial focus on college students. In 2013, 9.3% of students in one large university study reported using a prescription stimulant for non-medical use in the past year. CPAMM has excellent resources for college administrators, health professionals, and parents, including some useful infographics.

Visit the CPAMM website.

Sample care/case manager job descriptions

These are sample descriptions of a position within a counseling or wellness center at a university. A “care manager” (or “case manager”) deals with students with the most severe psychiatric illnesses. The care/case manager develops a relationship with these students and oversees/aids in their usage of different community and external resources.

Sample job description #1.

Sample job description #2

Sample job description #3

Reducing High-Risk Drinking Among Student-Athletes: The Effects of a Targeted Athlete-Specific Brief Intervention

In this study in the Journal of American College Health, researchers conducted a personalized intervention for D1 athletes at the University at Albany who showed tendencies toward heavy episodic drinking. The intervention highlighted the relationship between alcohol use and athletic performance and showed positive results that the intervention may contribute toward less heavy alcohol use. Presented here are the research article, a presentation slide deck, a sample feedback report provided to student participants, and a copy of the athlete survey.

Abstract:

Objective: This study examined the effects of a single session motivational interviewing–based in-person brief alcohol intervention that contained student-athlete–specific personalized drinking feedback.
Participants: Participants were 170 National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I student-athletes meeting
screening criteria for heavy episodic drinking.
Methods: Baseline assessments of alcohol use frequency and quantity, norm perceptions of peers’ alcohol use, experiences of negative consequences, and use of protective behaviors were administered to student-athletes prior to a 1-session brief intervention containing personalized feedback highlighting the relationship between alcohol use and athletic performance. Follow-up assessment was conducted
3 months post intervention.
Results: Student-athletes participating in the athlete-specific brief intervention showed significant reductions in their alcohol use and alcohol-related negative consequences, increases in use of protective behavioral strategies, and corrections in norm misperceptions at 3 months post intervention relative to a no treatment comparison group.
Conclusions: Student-athlete–specific brief alcohol interventions show promise in addressing high-risk drinking, reducing associated harms, and supporting health.

Download the full article.

Get Naloxone Now

Get Naloxone Now is an online resource to train people to respond effectively to an opioid-associated overdose emergency through the use of online training modules. Get Naloxone Now advocates for widespread access to overdose education and training in how to administer naloxone, the life-saving antidote for opioid-associated overdose, thus increasing the number of lives saved by bystanders and professional first responders (police officers, firefighters and EMTs).

Visit Get Naloxone Now.

Sources of Strength

Sources of Strength is a best practice youth suicide prevention project designed to harness the power of peer social networks to change unhealthy norms and culture, ultimately preventing suicide, bullying, and substance abuse. The mission of Sources of Strength is to prevent suicide by increasing help seeking behaviors and promoting connections between peers and caring adults. Sources of Strength moves beyond a singular focus on risk factors by utilizing an upstream approach for youth suicide prevention. This upstream model strengthens multiple sources of support (protective factors) around young individuals so that when times get hard they have strengths to rely on.

Visit Sources of Strength.

We Are Talking About Practice: the Influence of Mindfulness vs. Relaxation Training on Athletes’ Attention and Well-Being over High-Demand Intervals

A study from the University of Miami and published in the Journal of Cognitive Enhancement involved the use of meditation and relaxation techniques for student athletes. The data gathered suggest that mental training of almost any kind may help to alleviate some of the emotional and cognitive strains that otherwise occur during physical training.

Abstract:

We investigated the impact of short-form mindfulness training (MT) vs. relaxation training (RT) programs on sustained attention and emotional well-being in college football players (N = 100) during their high-demand pre-season training interval. Participants received 4 weeks of MT (n = 56) or RT (n = 44) and completed the Sustained Attention to Response Task (SART) and questionnaires assessing emotional well-being before and after the training period. Sustained attention was assessed via SART outcomes indexing performance (A′), reaction time variability (intraindividual coefficient of variation (ICV)), and self-reported mind wandering and meta-awareness (Probe 1, Probe 2), while emotional well-being was assessed via the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (State; STAI-S), and the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale. Overall, behavioral measures of sustained attention (A′, ICV) and self-report measures of emotional well-being (PANAS Positive, STAI-S, CES-D) declined during the training interval, suggesting that this was a high-demand interval with cognitive and emotional consequences. Further, while group effects comparing training programs were non-significant, greater engagement (i.e., practice and adherence) in MT, but not RT, predicted greater benefits, akin to protection-from-decline, on SART behavioral indices (A′, ICV). Greater engagement in both MT and RT predicted negative change in anxiety and positive change in positive affect over the high-demand interval. These results suggest that, similar to physical training, athletes must sufficiently engage in MT and RT to experience the distinct and overlapping benefits these programs offer over cognitively and emotionally demanding intervals, such as pre-season athletic training.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s subscription to Springer Link.

Factors that lead to greater college success

In this article from Rice University, researchers identify three competencies that most frequently showed evidence of supporting students’ college persistence and success, as measured by grades, retention and graduation: A sense of belonging, a growth mindset and personal goals and values. This article can be helpful as you promote social connectedness on your campus.

View the article here.
Purchase the full report of the research here.

Mental Health and Academic Success in College

This article in the B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy examines the connection between mental health and academic success as well as the economic benefit of attending to student mental health.

Abstract:

Mental health problems represent a potentially important but relatively unexplored factor in explaining human capital accumulation during college. We conduct the first study, to our knowledge, of how mental health predicts academic success during college in a random longitudinal sample of students. We find that depression is a significant predictor of lower GPA and higher probability of dropping out, particularly among students who also have a positive screen for an anxiety disorder. In within-person estimates using our longitudinal sample, we find again that co-occurring depression and anxiety are associated with lower GPA, and we find that symptoms of eating disorders are also associated with lower GPA. This descriptive study suggests potentially large economic returns from programs to prevent and treat mental health problems among college students, and highlights the policy relevance of evaluating the impact of such programs on academic outcomes using randomized trials.

Click here to access the full article through your institution’s access to De Gruyter Online.

CollegeAIM: Alcohol Intervention Matrix [NIAAA]

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism’s (NIAAA) College Alcohol Intervention Matrix (CollegeAIM) was developed for higher education officials, particularly alcohol and other drug program and student life staff, who seek to address harmful and underage drinking among their students. CollegeAIM is intended to inform and guide officials as they choose interventions for their campus communities.

View the CollegeAIM.

Evaluation of College Alcohol Policies: An Evaluation of College Online Alcohol-Policy Information

This article found that many alcohol policies were difficult to find on campus websites and offers suggestions on how better to educate and inform college students regarding institutional policies. JED Campus also believes that policies should be easily accessed on the website and cross referenced from multiple campus offices.

Abstract:

Excessive and underage drinking by US college and university students continues to be a significant problem. Curtailing the misuse of alcohol on college campuses is an important goal of college and university administrators because of the many negative consequences resulting from alcohol misuse. As part of their prevention programs, U.S. colleges and universities are required by law to make information about their alcohol policies available to students. Often the source of this information is the school’s Web site. The authors evaluated the alcohol-policy information that is available on the Web sites of the 52 top national universities listed in the 2002 rankings of US News and World Report. In general, they found that the information was difficult to find, was located in many areas of the Web site, and did not provide complete information about the school’s alcohol policy.

Click here to access the full article.

HEMHA Postvention Guide

This resource is intended for use by colleges and universities that are affected by and/or want to be prepared for campus crises and campus deaths. Suicide postvention efforts address the need for predetermined strategies to effectively and sensitively respond to campus deaths after they occur. We believe that it is important to note that a good postvention plan can have a positive impact on prevention, as well. This resource defines specific areas of consideration and planning and offers suggestions for best practices. Planning and implementation of postvention efforts rely heavily on using an interdisciplinary approach that utilizes the skills and resources of administrators, practitioners and the greater campus community. These disciplines will ideally collaborate in the postvention planning and coordination, implementation of postvention efforts, clinical services, communication efforts, and
decisions about holding memorials and other related events with the goal of helping the community return to a normal routine.

View or download the HEMHA Guide.

American Red Cross

The Red Cross has a number of resources available related to response after a natural disaster or emergency. Guidance includes information on how best to recover emotionally from these incidents. These resources may help you as you build your own emergency response protocols on campus.

Visit the Red Cross Disaster Relief and Recovery Services page.
Visit the Red Cross Disaster Training page.

Direct Threat and Caring for Students at Risk for Self Harm: Where We Stand Now

This resource, published by the National Association of College and University Attorneys in 2014, proposes some guidelines for safeguarding students and avoiding disability discrimination claims in the absence of formal or clear federal guidance.

View the full document here.

Sample medical leave policies

These are examples of medical leave policies that JED Campus staff feel are strong. Feel free to reference them when you are working on creating or updating your own policies. Remember to also refer to our JED Campus recommendations here when building your policies.

The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law has also created a model policy to help colleges and universities navigate these complex issues and develop a nondiscriminatory approach to a student who is in crisis because of a mental health problem. The model was developed after consultation with mental health experts, higher education administrators, counselors and students. It is a collection of best practices that all colleges and universities can and should adopt. It places particular emphasis on how to deal fairly and non-punitively with students in crisis, and how to support those whose mental health problems may be interfering with their academic, extracurricular or social lives. It addresses both voluntary and mandatory leave. View the full model policy here.

Tuition insurance programs

Tuition insurance plans refund a portion of unused annual tuition when students are withdrawn or dismissed for covered reasons. The following programs offer parity between medical leaves for physical and mental health concerns. Tuition insurance protects a family’s investment and can remove the fear of financial loss as a reason for a student to decide against getting the care they need (or medical leave). Remember to also refer to our JED Campus recommendations here, and you can view the following programs below:

Dewar – The Tuition Refund Plan

GradGuard – Insurance & Protection Products for College Life

GradGuard Tuition Protection Plan Policy from Allianz 2019 – 2020

Below you will find examples of how JED Campuses have advertised their tuition insurance policies.

Felician University — Tuition Insurance Flyer

Student Mental Health and the Law [JED]

This guide explains FERPA, HIPAA and disability law in addition to other complex legal topics schools can face related to student mental health.  The goal of this document is to provide all campus professionals with a summary of applicable laws and professional guidelines, as well as related good practice recommendations, to support well-informed decision making around students at risk. The good practice recommendations reflect input from round-table participants, key research findings, and previous work of JED and other organizations.

You can view the full guide here.

Framework for Developing Institutional Protocols for the Acutely Distressed or Suicidal College Student [JED]

This guide, developed by JED with input from expert professionals, provides your college or university community, regardless of its size, culture, and resources, with a list of issues to consider when drafting or revising protocols relating to the management of the student in acute distress or at risk for suicide. This document is a tool to aid your institution in developing or revising protocols related to response, emergency contact notification, and medical leave of absence.

View the full guide here.

CCMH – Center for Collegiate Mental Health

The Center for Collegiate Mental Health (CCMH) is a multidisciplinary, member-driven, Practice-Research-Network (PRN) focused on providing accurate and up-to-date information on the mental health of today’s college students. CCMH strives to connect practice, research, and technology to benefit students, mental health providers, administrators, researchers, and the public.

The collaborative efforts of more than 400 college and university counseling centers and supportive organizations have enabled CCMH to build one of the nation’s largest databases on college student mental health. CCMH actively develops clinical tools, reports, and research using this data.

Visit the CCMH website for more information, including an archive of annual reports dating back to 2009.

CCMH also publishes an annual report that summarizes de-identified data contributed by college and university counseling centers across the country, describing over 185,000 students, 3,800+ clinicians, and almost 1.4 million appointments.

Click here to view the 2020 CCMH Annual Report.

National College Health Assessment [ACHA]

The ACHA-National College Health Assessment (NCHA) is a nationally recognized research survey that can assist you in collecting precise data about your students’ health habits, behaviors, and perceptions. The ACHA-NCHA offers a way for you to map the widest range of health issues:

  • Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use
  • Sexual health
  • Weight, nutrition, and exercise
  • Mental health
  • Personal safety and violence

Visit the American College Health Association website for more information on the survey.

Garrett Lee Smith (GLS) Suicide Prevention Grant

The purpose of this program is to develop a comprehensive, collaborative, well-coordinated, and evidence-based approach to: (1) enhance services for all college students, including those at risk for suicide, depression, serious mental illness, and/or substance use disorders that can lead to school failure; (2) prevent mental and substance use disorders; (3) promote help-seeking behavior and reduce stigma; and (4) improve the identification and treatment of at-risk college students so they can successfully complete their studies. It is expected that this program will reduce the adverse consequences of serious mental illness and substance use disorders, including suicidal behavior, substance-related injuries, and school failure.

The GLS grant is a great opportunity to enhance services on campus and aid in implementation of your strategic plans while in JED Campus.

Visit the SAMHSA website for more information on the 2018 grant period. Applications were closed as of February 20, 2018.

Reducing Alcohol Use and Related Problems Among College Students: A Guide to Best Practices

This guide, produced by the Maryland Collaborative to Reduce College Drinking and Related Problems, synthesizes the existing research on interventions that are and are not effective. Research studies during recent decades have demonstrated the comparative effectiveness of different approaches to reduce college student drinking. Some approaches, such as simply providing information to students about the risks of alcohol consumption, are not effective in changing behavior. This Guide describes the two major categories of interventions that seem to have the most promise. First, providing intensive personalized feedback and monitoring drinking patterns over time can help an individual to recognize the existence of a problem and modify his/her behavior. Second, on a more macro-level, changes in the environment to reduce the availability of alcohol as well as youth access to it are clearly effective ways to decrease excessive alcohol use and associated problems.

This Guide includes a detailed description of various strategies, a summary of the research supporting or
refuting their effectiveness, and tips for implementation. By clearly and concisely summarizing the evidence
regarding which approaches have been found to be effective or promising, and which have not, college administrators and community stakeholders can have a better idea of how to allocate resources more effectively.

Click here to access the guide.

The Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act: 7 Myths — and the Truth

Originally appearing in the Chronicle of Higher Education in 2008, this simple article clears up many of the misconceptions about FERPA and includes additional information about HIPAA and exceptions to FERPA.

The article can be found here.

Mind, Body, and Sport Handbook

A refreshing primer by the NCAA on the mental health aspects of the student athlete, that identifies the specific stressors for this population, and the different components of developing best practices to construct mental health services and support for student athletes. The chapters address:

  • Stressors specific to student-athlete identify, such as transition, performance, injury, academic stress and coach relations
  • Overview of clinical diagnoses, including depression, anxiety, eating disorders, substance abuse and gambling
  • Key components in developing best practices for constructing mental health services for student-athletes
  • The role and perspective of sports medicine staff in identification and referral
  • Cultural pressures and impacts on minority groups
  • How sexual assault, hazing and bullying affect mental health

Click here to download the guide.

A Strategic Primer on College Student Mental Health

This primer is a detailed report on student mental health issues with the focus on launching national conversation and citing examples of best practices that contribute to student wellness. It also frames the issue of mental health as a learning and academic success issue.

Abstract:

This report (2014) is the product of a year-long partnership between NASPA: Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education, the American Council on Education, and the American Psychological Association focusing on student mental health issues. Co-authored by Louise Douce and Richard Keeling, and responding in part to President Obama’s call to launch a national conversation to increase the understanding and awareness about mental health, the partnering organizations, in collaboration with the lead authors, advisory committee, editorial group, and the organizations and institutions they represent, reviewed trends in college student mental health and sought out examples of practice that contribute to student well-being. We know that mental health continues to impact students in course learning and campus engagement. It is our collective hope that through increased awareness and collaboration, institutions of higher education can continue to serve all students and support their learning and development.

Click here to access the full report.

A Public Health Approach to Campus Mental Health Promotion and Suicide Prevention

From the Harvard Health Policy Review (Spring 2012), this article provides an excellent summary of the JED Comprehensive Approach and details how Cornell University, a JED Campus School has utilized it in their work.

Abstract:

The growing mental health needs of students at colleges and universities continue to garner considerable attention as well as challenge institutions of higher education (IHEs) regarding how to respond. Providing access to mental health services on campus is one key component to responding to these issues,however, it is not sufficient. An effective response requires a broader public health approach that focuses on reducing the risk of suicide and promoting mental health for the entire student population. This article will examine various public health approaches to suicide prevention and mental health promotion and will outline Cornell University’s broad-based framework applicable to any IHE.

Click here to view the full article.

New Data on the Nature of Suicidal Crises in College Students: Shifting the Paradigm

This study analyzes data and promotes a comprehensive approach to suicide prevention by redefining it as an institution centered problem. Hence the entire administrative structure of the university will have to be engaged to intervene at all points of the suicide continuum as is promoted in JED Campus.

Abstract:

This article presents new data on the nature of suicidal crises in college students. Data were collected from over 26,000 undergraduate and graduate students at 70 colleges and universities. An anonymous Web-based survey was designed to provide insight into the full spectrum of suicidal thought, intent, and action among college students. The authors discuss implications of these data and outline a new, problem-focused paradigm for conceptualizing the problem of college student suicidality and for guiding institutional policies and interventions at multiple points along the continuum of suicidal thoughts and behaviors. The proposed paradigm encompasses and expands on the current model of treating individuals in crisis in order to act preventively to reduce both prevalence and incidence of all forms of suicidality among college students.

Click here to purchase the full article.

The US Air Force Suicide Prevention Program

The Air Force Suicide Prevention Program (AFSPP) is an example of a sustained community-based effort that directly addresses suicide as a public health problem. The AFSPP is also the basis of the JED Comprehensive Approach.  Although much is known about risk factors for suicide, there are few examples of multifaceted, sustainable programs for reducing morbidity and mortality attributable to suicide and suicidal behaviors. The AFSPP has been found to have achieved significant relative risk reductions of rates of suicide and other violence related outcomes, including accidental death and domestic violence.

Click here to view the full article.

JED Recommendations: DEVELOP LIFE SKILLS

DEVELOP LIFE SKILLS

Supporting life skills education is a valuable strategy for helping students cope with the stress of college life, make wise lifestyle choices, foster resilience, and achieve academic success. Ensuring that students develop emotional and interpersonal awareness is a true preventive strategy aimed at enabling students to thrive. Diverse, cross-campus participation of staff members in providing this type of programming reinforces the message that emotional health is a campus wide concern.

Interpersonal and emotional awareness are strengths that help reduce risk factors for depression and suicide and reinforce emotional resilience. There are also clear links between physical and emotional health and academic success. Efforts to foster a student’s emotional and physical well-being supports a student’s sense of purpose and identity, and can help increase the likelihood of academic success and student retention.

In this domain, schools may take the following action steps:

  • Offer or enhance resilience programming and/or educational groups that educate students on the following topics:
    • communication skills
    • identifying and regulating emotions
    • managing finances
    • conflict resolution
    • bystander training
    • relationship skills
    • sexual harassment/relationship violence
    • stalking
    • bullying
    • hazing
  • Offer or enhance programming and/or services targeting academic skills in the areas of:
    • study skills
    • test anxiety
    • stress management
    • time management
  • Offer or enhance comprehensive programming on the effects of lifestyles choices on wellness (e.g. adequate sleep, exercise, nutrition, etc.)
  • Educate the campus community about the links between physical and emotional health and academic success

Please note that in keeping with JED’s Comprehensive Approach to emotional health, it is critical that we encourage multiple offices on campus to participate in the production of these programs and outreach initiatives. Staff members need not be clinicians and the work often may be spread amongst many offices, including, but not limited to:

  • Counseling services
  • Health services
  • Health promotion
  • Residential life
  • Athletics and recreation
  • Academic advising
  • Financial aid
  • Fraternity and sorority life
  • Student groups

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Develop Life Skills domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: PROMOTE SOCIAL CONNECTEDNESS

PROMOTE SOCIAL CONNECTEDNESS

Research has shown that loneliness and isolation are significant risk factors for mental health problems – including suicidal behavior. Therefore, supportive social relationships and feeling connected to campus, family and friends are protective factors that can help lower risk. Connectedness is more than simply encouraging students to “get involved”; it is about creating an environment that builds interpersonal relationships between students, promotes inclusiveness on campus, aids in identifying and reaching out to disconnected and isolated students, and supporting connectedness among traditionally marginalized or higher risk student groups.

In this domain, schools may take the following action steps:

  • Establish defined spaces in student unions and/or other public areas for student groups to meet.
  • Develop peer mentoring programs.
  • Offer or enhance programs, activities and campaigns that promote connections to community-based, cultural, religious, or national groups.
  • Offer or enhance programs, activities, and campaigns that promote tolerance and inclusiveness on campus.
  • Develop ways to identify and reach out to isolated or disconnected students.

Because students often turn to their peers when they are struggling, they are more likely to be open and receptive to programming that is designed and delivered by their peers. Peer mentoring programs are very successful in this regard. Educational/outreach campaigns that are designed and delivered by peers can promote successful navigation of the college experience. Leveraging the power of peer support where possible is recommended. Partnering with student organizations will also enhance community inclusion. Partners may include:

  • Fraternities and sororities
  • Athletics
  • Student government
  • Student clubs
  • Peer mentors
  • Residence hall assistants (RAs)

The school can analyze student data and utilize campus surveys to identify disconnected and/or isolated students or student populations so that supportive programs can be developed. Traditionally marginalized and higher risk student groups include, but are not limited to:

  • Veterans
  • LGBTQ+
  • BIPOC students
  • First generation students
  • Economically disadvantaged students
  • International students
  • Undocumented students
  • Commuter students
  • Non-traditionally aged and returning students
  • Transfer students
  • Students with disabilities including physical/mobility conditions, mental health conditions, and learning disabilities
  • Survivors of violence and trauma
  • Students in recovery from substance use disorders

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Promote Social Connectedness domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: IDENTIFY STUDENTS AT RISK

IDENTIFY STUDENTS AT RISK

Students who are struggling often have not had any experience with treatment or seeking out assistance for their problems. Therefore, it is important to identify students with mental health, alcohol and other drug misuse problems and/or those who are at risk for suicide before they are in crisis.

Three core objectives can strengthen the school’s mental health safety net for students at risk: support the transition to college for incoming students with mental health and substance abuse histories, provide robust screening opportunities at diverse touchpoints in the student experience, and train campus community members to identify, reach out to, and refer students at risk.

  • Support the transition to college for students with mental health and substance abuse histories – there is tremendous value in proactively providing information about mental health resources on campus so that new and transfer students can plan for and manage ongoing care and treatment when they are at college. This effort reinforces the school’s holistic approach to wellness and can provide targeted services early on, ease the transition to college, and help avoid letting at-risk students slip through the cracks.
  • Provide robust screening opportunities – screening days can help students recognize when it might be time to reach out for help. Screening programs need not be run solely by licensed clinicians and when facilitated by a broad representation of campus staff/offices/student groups, can reinforce the message that emotional wellness is a campus-wide concern.
  • Identify, reach out to, and refer students at risk – gatekeeper training programs are a very effective preventive measure that emphasizes the importance of recognizing, reaching out to, and making a personal connection with any student who is struggling. The objective of this effort is to emphasize the value of reaching out to students when they begin to struggle, before they are in crisis, and to know when it is time to refer for formal counseling.

 

JED Recommendations: Gatekeeper Training

IDENTIFY STUDENTS AT RISK:
GATEKEEPER TRAINING

Schools should look for opportunities to train campus community members to identify, reach out to, and refer students who might be struggling. Trainings can be online or in-person and presented in a number of different ways depending upon the population. JED recommends tailoring the training to individual groups when possible so that the information the group is receiving is most relevant to the individual. This is one of three major objectives in the Identify Students at Risk Domain.

Under this objective, schools can take the following action steps:

  • Develop, expand, or strengthen gatekeeper training program for campus faculty and staff in identifying, reaching out to, and referring students who may be struggling. This training should be mandatory for all faculty and staff. Include a broad range of campus participants in gatekeeper training, including:
    • Faculty
    • Academic advisors (academic risk or performance issues are often caused by mental health or substance use issues)
    • Deans and department heads
    • Student affairs administrators
    • Residence Life staff
    • Campus security
    • Campus support and office staff
    • Dining staff
    • Custodial and facilities staff
    • Transportation staff
  • Train students to identify, reach out to, and refer their friends/peers who may be struggling with mental health or substance issues.
    • Regular skill refreshers and reminders can be offered
    • Campaigns on campus can encourage peer support and help-giving
  • Develop and/or refine a protocol for reporting students of concern. Those who are trained should know how to support others in their community but appropriately refer and report concerns when necessary.
    • The reporting and response process should be formalized and documented and work collaboratively with the Behavioral Intervention Team (“BIT”) or Care Team
    • The protocol for reporting students of concern should be well-publicized
    • Data should be collected and analyzed on reports and response
    • Parents and families may also be educated on how to report their student and seek help if they are concerned about their mental health or substance use

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Gatekeeper Training, click here.

JED Recommendations: Screening Opportunities

IDENTIFY STUDENTS AT RISK:
SCREENING OPPORTUNITIES 

 

Schools should consider providing robust screening opportunities at diverse touchpoints in the student experience.
This is one of three major objectives in the Identify Students at Risk Domain.
Under this objective, schools should take the following action steps:

 

  • Implement screening or wellness days focused on substance use and common mental health issues on a regular basis. Screening days need not be staffed by clinicians and should be facilitated by various offices on campus, including, but not limited to:
    • Health and counseling services
    • Health/substance abuse education
    • Dean of Students office
    • Academic advising
    • Residential life and education
    • Student organizations
    • Athletics and recreation
  • Implement standardized screenings for substance use and misuse and common mental health problems by health service clinicians at primary care visits.
    • Students are more often seen at health services than in counseling so it is important that these screenings occur on a regular basis at the health center
    • Primary care clinicians should implement self-care plans for those students who screen positive for mild-to-moderate mental health issues and refer to counseling for more serious issues
  • Provide and publicize screening tools for depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders on the counseling and/or health education websites.
    • Information about on- and off-campus support resources and assistance should be provided with all screening tools so that students who have a positive screen will know what to do and how/where they can access help.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Screening Opportunities, click here.

JED Recommendations: Transition to College

IDENTIFY STUDENTS AT RISK:
TRANSITION TO COLLEGE

 

Schools can play an important role for incoming students with mental health and substance abuse histories and support them in their transition to college.
This is one of three major objectives in the Identify Students at Risk Domain.
Under this objective, schools may take the following action steps:

 

  • Request all new incoming and transfer students submit a comprehensive medical history form including mental health and substance use history.
  • Direct message incoming students who self-identify with mental health and/or substance use histories about services and resources on campus prior to arrival.
  • Educate families and support networks of incoming students regarding mental health and substance use resources and services on campus.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Transition to College, click here.

JED Recommendations: INCREASE HELP-SEEKING BEHAVIOR

INCREASE HELP-SEEKING BEHAVIOR

Promoting help seeking is an important early intervention for a student in crisis and/or experiencing mental health or substance abuse issues. Ideally, students will be comfortable with and knowledgeable about asking for help. Two core objectives that can promote help seeking are: removing the burden of stigma associated with mental health problems and increasing access to resource information.

Often, students experiencing emotional distress are reluctant to seek out help because they are skeptical about the effectiveness of treatment and/or they are influenced by prejudices associated with mental illness. Educational/informational campaigns that serve to eliminate the stigma of mental health and substance abuse problems can help alter negative perceptions and increase the likelihood that a student will seek out help when it is needed. Additionally, activities and measures that increase awareness about campus/off-campus mental health services can serve to eliminate barriers to help seeking that result from a student’s simply not knowing what resources are available. Education about available resources, cost of treatment, and insurance coverage, etc., will equip students with reliable information when there is a need to seek help.

In this domain, schools can take the following action steps:

  • Create counseling and health center websites that are easily accessible for students, ideally available within two clicks of the main page of the school’s website.
  • Cross-reference/link counseling center, health services and health education websites where applicable.
  • Implement campaigns/programs to encourage help-seeking by destigmatizing mental health and substance abuse problems on campus. Programs and campaigns should:
    • Inform students about campus resources for emotional support or substance education/treatment
    • Normalize and destigmatize mental health problems
    • When possible, be designed and delivered by students (either student-run, or with significant input from students)
    • Utilize a wide range of methods including mental health fairs, activities to decrease stress, brochures/posters, campus newspaper, radio or TV station, theater, and social media
    • Be strategically timed:
      • focused on stimulant use/diversion during exam times
      • focused on substance use/misuse during known school events/party times
  • Utilize online resources from other organizations to enhance wellness messaging and resources.
    • Providing online screening tools for mental health and substance abuse may help students who may not otherwise seek counseling but will take an online screening
    • Screening tools should be either linked to or featured on home page, counseling page and other appropriate sites on the school’s website
    • Screening tools should include information about available resources (on- and off-campus) in the event that a student screens positive
    • Examples of screening tools (or school can create their own):
      • ULifeline Self Evaluator
      • Screening for Mental Health
      • Publicly available screening tools (such as PHQ, GAD7, CAGE)
      • American Foundation for Suicide Prevention Interactive Screening Program
  • Develop or enhance peer counseling programs.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Increase Help-Seeking Behavior domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE SERVICES

PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE SERVICES

Preserving a student’s mental health is critical in preventing substance use, risk for suicide and strengthening their academic success. Providing adequate on-site access to ongoing mental health prevention support and direct services is the backbone of any college mental health system. Ideally, on-campus services will include both basic primary care mental health and crisis support.

Additionally, providing substance use education, prevention and treatment is a fundamental component of college mental health services on college campuses.  Education about the dangers of substance misuse and drug diversion, the connection between substance use and relationship violence, academic performance and overall well-being, along with a variety of treatment options either on campus or in the community, is an important consideration for the college community.

There are five key objectives in the substance use and mental health domain:

  • Take an active role in helping students find adequate and comprehensive health insurance coveragethis allows students to seek and obtain the best optimal care for prevention and treatment of mental health issues and alleviates financial concerns while making treatment choices. Insurance coverage can favorably impact a student’s ability to remain in college.
  • Create and maintain leave policies and protocols supporting students in distress – Clear and well-publicized policies for leaves of absence can help reduce stress and anxiety when a student might be in the midst of a medical or mental health crisis and may need to consider a leave of absence. Clear policy can help reduce the perceived stigma of needing to ask for and/or considering a leave of absence.
  • Establish systems, protocols and processes that best help to coordinate necessary care for students – coordination of care between providers and services on/off campus facilitates continuity of care and a comprehensive/holistic approach to mental health treatment.
  • Seek to expedite, increase, and provide access to all necessary clinical care services, including after-hours carecampuses will engage in a variety of activities designed to increase the likelihood that a student in crisis, distress, with mental health issues, with alcohol or other drug problems, or experiencing suicidal thought will seek and receive help.
  • Create and maintain substance use policies and protocols supporting studentsPreserving a student’s mental health is critical in preventing substance use, risk for suicide and strengthening their academic success. It is essential to diagnose and treat students with alcohol and other drug use disorders and educate students on the dangers of recreational substance use (alcohol, drugs), substance use, misuse of prescription drugs and drug diversion.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Provide Mental Health and Substance Use Services domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: Access to Care

PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES:
ACCESS TO CARE

 

A school should seek to expedite, increase, and facilitate access to all necessary clinical care services, including after-hours care.
This is one of five main objectives in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services domain.
Under this objective, schools should take the following action steps:

 

  • Offer clinical services outside of typical “business hours” (evenings, weekends, etc.)
  • Provide counseling services in alternative locations on campus. Examples include, but are not limited to:
    • Residence halls
    • Recreation areas
    • Student centers
  • Develop or refine a triage system in the counseling center for those in serious/urgent need of care.
  • Implement action steps to limit wait lists/wait times, such as:
    • daily walk-in hours for students with urgent concerns
    • extending time between appointments for established patients to open up time for new student appointments
    • increasing referrals during busy periods for students who need longer term therapy
    • establishing a set number of weekly intakes for each clinician to maintain space for new students
  •  Provide resources to manage after-hours care/emergency situations, such as:
    • on campus services to serve after-hours needs and/or
    • promoting community resource or hotline/text line for after-hours needs and/or
    • promoting a national 24-hour crisis or suicide prevention hotline/text line for after-hours needs
  • Develop or refine memoranda of understanding (MOUs) with local emergency and mental health services. These should include:
    • A protocol for sharing relevant information including discharge planning, treatment recommendations, and any academic accommodations that might be needed
    • A plan to accommodate the school’s limitations such as lack of supervision in dorms and limited counseling center hours on evenings/weekends, etc.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Access to Care, click here.

JED Recommendations: Coordination of Care

PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES:
COORDINATION OF CARE

 

A school should seek to establish systems, protocols and processes that coordinate necessary care for students.
This is one of five main objectives in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services domain.
Under this objective, schools should take the following action steps:

 

  • Develop or enhance clinical services for mental health and substance abuse, including:
    • Counseling/psychotherapy
    • Academic/career counseling
    • Group therapy
    • Psycho-educational groups
    • Online, email or chat services
  • Evaluate the staff-to-student ratio to adequately address the clinical needs of students; ideally, one FTE : 1,000-1,200 students for the services offered.
    • If under-utilized, consider:
      • increasing awareness of the counseling service
      • increasing advertising/outreach
      • diversifying staff
      • implementing programming to destigmatize use of counseling service
    • If over-utilized, consider:
      • hiring additional staff
      • incorporating graduate level interns/post-docs
      • teletherapy, online counseling options
  • Seek to facilitate access to psychiatric medication management (on- or off-campus) as indicated
  • Establish a system for coordination of care for shared patients between relevant campus service providers, such as:
    • Shared electronic records (respectful of HIPAA and confidentiality)
    • Formalized regular joint meetings between counseling and health services and other relevant service providers to discuss shared cases.
  • Coordinate care with off-campus services
    • Maintain an updated list of referrals for mental health and substance abuse services including information on types of accepted insurance, wait times, and cost.
    • Obtain consent for release of information so that basic information can be shared between school and provider, as appropriate and needed with due consideration for compliance with state and federal privacy law
    • Designate methods and protocols for communication and tracking between counseling center staff and community providers
  • Train primary health care providers on campus to assess, treat, and refer (if needed) for basic mental health, substance abuse and behavioral related concerns
  • Collect data on student utilization and incidents on campus related to mental health and substance abuse issues

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Coordination of Care, click here.

JED Recommendations: Health Insurance Resources

PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES:
HEALTH INSURANCE RESOURCES

 

A school should take an active role in helping students find adequate and comprehensive health insurance coverage.
This is one of five main objectives in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services domain.
Under this objective, schools may take the following action steps:

 

  • Research the feasibility of offering a college-sponsored health insurance policy if one does not already exist.
    • A school sponsored plan should be affordable
    • A school sponsored plan should provide parity in coverage and be non-discriminatory between general physical health and mental health care and services.
  • If feasible, require health insurance for all full-time students requiring a hard-waiver such that personal insurance is equally comprehensive.
  • The school-sponsored health insurance plan is recommended to include comprehensive coverage for mental health and substance abuse services including:
    • inpatient hospitalization
    • partial hospitalization
    • intensive outpatient treatment
    • therapy sessions
    • addiction counseling
    • medication assisted treatment (buprenorphine, methadone, suboxone) for students with opioid use disorders
    • psychiatric medication management/psychiatry
    • adequate coverage for medication (i.e. little-to-no out-of-pocket expense for medication)
  • Develop a written resource to assist students and families in making informed decisions when choosing between the school-sponsored health insurance plan and other health insurance options. The resource ideally will prompt students and their families to ask specific questions of their insurance carrier and of themselves increasing the likelihood that the student will have adequate coverage while they are at school. These include:
    • Does the plan provide the same coverage for the student while they are out of state at college as it does in state or is coverage limited to urgent care?
    • Are there in-network providers near the college that the student will be attending?
    • How current is the list of in-network providers?
    • Are they accepting new patients?
    • Will the student require transportation to access the providers and if so, is transportation available?

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Health Insurance Resources, click here.

JED Recommendations: Leave Policies and Protocols

PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE USE/MISUSE SERVICES:
LEAVE POLICIES AND PROTOCOLS

 

A school will benefit from having leave policies and protocols support students in distress.
This is one of five main objectives in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services domain.
Under this objective, schools may take the following action steps:

 

  • Disclaimer:  These recommendations are high level in nature (not meant to be exhaustive)  and should not be construed as legal advice or guidance.  Campuses need to consult with their general counsel to determine if their policies and procedures are in alignment with rulings from the Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights, the United States Department of Justice, and/or other regulatory guidance.  Definitions
  • Voluntary Leave of absence:  A voluntary leave of absence (LOA) is granted by the college in which a student is enrolled.  A LOA is a temporary interruption of a student’s program during which the student is considered to be enrolled.  Under most federal and state requirements an LOA cannot exceed 180 days in any 12 month period without potential implications for financial aid repayment.  Please check with your local/federal financial aid regulations surrounding this.
    • Medical leave of absence:  A medical leave of absence (MLOA) is when a student needs to take a leave due to a mental health or physical health issue.  For more information on LOA’s see this guide here.   
  • Involuntary/Mandatory Leave of Absence: When a student is unwilling to take a voluntary leave of absence and an individualized assessment based on objective evidence indicates that they pose a serious risk to the health and safety of others in the community, the school should have a process in place requiring the student to take an involuntary leave of absence.  These policies should be used rarely and be a last resort as described below.
  • Withdrawal:  An official withdrawal is when an enrolled student decides to leave their college/university after their semester begins.  JED Campus Recommendations for Leave PoliciesDevelop/refine a written voluntary medical leave of absence policy consistent with the following recommendations:

    Establish a central office to administer and coordinate all leaves to ensure consistency and eliminate confusion for the student. In this office the students can discuss the decision to take a leave and/or consider possible accommodations that might allow them to remain in school. The central office should:

    • Review reasons for the leave request
    • Discuss potential accommodations to allow a student to remain in school and avert a leave of absence.
    • Discuss the impact on academics
    • Discuss financial considerations, including tuition insurance and tuition refunds
    • Review the student’s transcript and scholarship status.
    • Consider the specific issues for graduate/professional students such as, graduate assistantships, grants etc.
    • Discuss visa and insurance implications for international students
    • Discuss the possibility of a leave collaboratively with the student. If they decide to take a medical leave of absence, frame it as a positive step that the student is taking to support their wellbeing and overall success.

    Consider reasonable accommodations to allow a student to remain on campus and avert a medical leave.

    • Create virtual accommodations, where possible and reasonable, so that students can participate in social, academic, and other activities while off-campus (for example if a student is hospitalized with a mental health condition).
    • Encourage faculty to implement pass/fail grading/non punitive coursework options for students to help students stay on campus during difficult periods. 
    • Encourage faculty to provide flexible attendance policies.

    Seek to create and maintain leave policies that are transparent and easily accessible to the campus community. 

    • The policies need to be accessible via the student handbook, the faculty handbook and easily searchable. Consider disseminating the policy to parents/families, faculty, academic advisors, athletics, students, financial aid, etc. 
    • The medical leave of absence policy should include clear and concise explanation of the college’s expectations for the student while they are on leave that are fully and concretely explained. This should include a description of documentation required for a medical leave.
    • An individualized assessment should be done with each student to develop a wellness plan that might include clinical treatment. Work to ensure that any treatment is culturally and identity relevant.
      • Inquire about financial resources/insurance coverage to meet these goals. 
      • Encourage students to build social connections and sleep/nutrition/exercise practices into these plans.
    • School policies should allow for decisions about length of time and terms of medical leaves on a case-by-case basis.
    • The medical leave process should be well coordinated among relevant offices and the college should assist students in appeal processes for tuition and housing costs.
    • Provide the student with a written summary letter of the details of the voluntary leave process, the details for what they need to do to return to school, and any other details to which has been agreed.

    Once a student has decided to take a medical leave of absence, where possible, support for students while on leave might include: 

    • The facilitation of avenues for students to access mental health resources while on leave in their communities.
    • Virtual academic and community support for students while on leave.
    • Campus staff who can reach out to, and support students on leave.

    A return from leave policy should be established and a checklist should be provided to the student.

    • There should be clarity around timelines, deadlines, and documentation for returning from leave. The return from leave policy should include the following:
      • A requirement to submit a formal written request that includes:
        • The current status of the problem
        • Treatment received, or ongoing, for the problem
        • A supportive meeting with the student to review the recommendations regarding return, including treatment plan (can be in-person or via Zoom/phone)
          • The return from leave clinical documentation should be sent directly to the Health Center for physical conditions or the Counseling Center for mental health conditions (in cases where the Counseling Center was involved in student treatment before the leave).
          • The Health or Counseling Centers should make a recommendation regarding a student’s readiness to return from leave to the designated office who oversees the leave process (for example, Dean of Students, VP of Student Affairs)

    Upon return from leave, the college might support students in the following ways: 

    • Provide wellness coaching upon their return to the university that encourages students to adopt healthy habits, connect with their peers, set a workable schedule, and utilize mental health resources.
    • Ensure financial/personnel resources to provide counseling and support for returning students.

    There should be parity (non-discrimination) in policy/procedure for students leaving for physical and mental health issues.

    Offer a tuition insurance policy that has parity between medical leaves for physical and mental health concerns. Tuition insurance protects a family’s investment and can reduce the fear of financial loss as a reason for a student to decide against getting the care they need (or medical leave).

    • The school may write a letter to families that outlines the benefits of participating in a tuition reimbursement plan, specifically:
      • Very little cost for plan versus potential cost for loss of tuition
      • Covers unexpected occurrences
      • Encourages students to get the care they need when they need it without having to weigh significant financial loss as a factor in their decision
    • The tuition insurance plan will offer the same reimbursement coverage for leaves due to mental health issues as for leaves due to physical health issues
      • The tuition insurance plan will provide parity in conditions for reimbursement – for example, some policies require hospitalization for mental health issues as a precondition for reimbursement, but only a note for reimbursement for medical issues – this type of inequity should be avoided.
      • The school’s tuition reimbursement policies can also be established to provide a better reimbursement schedule for students who take legitimate medical leaves.

    Develop/refine a written involuntary/mandatory leave of absence policy consistent with the following recommendations:

    As discussed above, on the rare occasion that a student is refusing/unwilling to take a leave of absence and poses a serious risk to others and/or is causing serious campus disruption based on their behavior, it is important for schools to have a policy in place for involuntarily withdrawing the student and for addressing the disruptive behavior. Keep in mind that in 2011 the Department of Justice stated that these types of policies should be considered when there are concerns about danger toward others only.  There is still confusion/ambiguity as to when/how/if such policies may be implemented when there are concerns about a student’s potential danger toward self.  

     A few considerations when developing these policies are below:

    • Provide an individualized assessment  to evaluate whether an involuntary leave is indicated. The DOJ articulated how “direct threat standard” may apply and is central to making determinations about an involuntary leave. 
    • The policy will indicate that suicidal ideation ALONE is not a justification for mandatory leave. Schools and their legal counsel should review carefully the DOJ changes from 2011 on this topic.  
    • The policy should consider mandatory leave when:
      • The school has exhausted reasonable efforts and accommodations to assist a student’s ability to remain on campus
      • The student’s behavior is a material disruption of, or direct threat to the campus living and learning community and/or its members
    • The school will provide a clear process for appealing a leave decision
    • There will be policy in place to consider/encourage communication with families around plans for leave and return, consistent with state and federal privacy law requirements
    • A mandatory leave of absence should be rare and given only after all other efforts have been applied to keep a student in school.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Leave Policies and Protocols, click here.

JED Recommendations: Substance Abuse

PROVIDE MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES:
SUBSTANCE ABUSE

 

A school should seek to create and maintain substance abuse policies and protocols supporting all students.
This is one of five main objectives in the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services domain.
Under this objective, schools may take the following action steps:

 

  • Develop/refine a policy on alcohol and other drugs that is consistent with the following recommendations:
    • Clear, explicit and communicated in several ways (online, in person, flyers around campus, etc.)
    • Disciplinary and clinical consequences need to be consistent with the severity of the substance-related event
    • In addition to disciplinary sanctions, policies need to include education, prevention and treatment options
    • Provide prompt and equitable processes for discipline
  • Develop/refine a “medical amnesty” policy that is consistent with the following recommendations:
    • The policy includes:
      • Assurance that students who utilize emergency services, or report a friend who is in need of emergency services, due to intoxication and/or potential overdose will be subject to diminished or no disciplinary sanctions
      • An education/prevention/treatment response that includes clinical follow-up
      • Amnesty exclusion criteria for students who have utilized emergency services more than a certain number of times
      • The policy will be well publicized in the student handbook, faculty handbook, publicly in the residence halls, if applicable, and within three clicks of the school homepage
  • Develop/refine protocols for responding to alcohol and drug overdoses that are consistent with the following recommendations:
    • The clearance process to return to campus preferably includes a clinical evaluation and targeted assessment, including the use of a motivational interview
    • Provide standards for communication regarding a student’s return among relevant campus offices including:
      • conduct or community standards
      • substance abuse services or clinical services
      • housing (if applicable)
    • For serious events, provide a process to follow-up and check in with the student after some time has passed to determine the student’s status
    • The student will face consequences for not following treatment recommendations, which may impact continued enrollment
    • Students who have not had prior transport to the hospital should be required to complete an educational program highlighting the dangers of substance abuse after a drug or alcohol infraction
    • There should be a clear policy regarding communication with family members when a student has had a substance related emergency. This policy should reflect applicable state and federal privacy law
    • The emergency policy/procedure should be documented in writing and shared with and appropriately reviewed by all offices/staff who might participate in a response
  • Publish all alcohol and other drug policies in the student handbook, faculty handbook, and within three clicks of the school homepage.
  • Establish or expand recovery community and/or support programs on campus
  • Provide programs at orientation to educate new students about school policies regarding substance use
  • Implement strategically timed messaging campaigns to remind students about the risks and consequences of substance use/misuse (for example, during exam times or certain events)
  • Implement messaging campaigns designed to educate students about the risks and dangers of opiate misuse, including the effects with other substances
  • Develop/refine policies and protocols for prescription of opiates, tranquilizers (benzodiazepines and sleep medicines) and stimulants, including:
    • Articulating appropriate requirements for health service and/or mental health clinicians so as to follow state requirements for prescription of controlled substances
    • Language in reference to students who are prescribed stimulants, tranquilizers/sleep medications or opiates to the effect that those students will be provided with appropriate information about the dangers, risks, and consequences of drug misuse and diversion
    • Potential language, consistent with medical privacy and any informed consent laws and regulations, that informs students who are prescribed these substances, that they may be asked or required to sign a voluntary consent document attesting that students understand policies, risks, and consequences of drug diversion
    • Language that encourages clinicians, when controlled or potentially dangerous/abused medications are prescribed, to consider the potential for abuse of prescribed medications and to provide students the lowest quantity of pills that are clinically necessary, while taking other medically appropriate steps to reduce the risk of such abuse
  • Avail emergency Naloxone doses to those at risk for overdose (as permitted by local law)
    • To help prevent death by opiate overdose, health service personnel, campus police, and other campus first responders should be trained on the administration of naloxone doses and supplies of naloxone should be reasonably available to those who are trained to use it in the performance of their duties. Schools may also consider training the general population and making naloxone doses available to individuals who may be at risk of overdose for themselves, or may be concerned about the potential for overdose of family members and/or peers

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Substance Abuse, click here.

JED Recommendations: FOLLOW CRISIS MANAGEMENT PROCEDURES

FOLLOW CRISIS MANAGEMENT PROCEDURE

Crisis management includes access to immediate emergency services on campus or in the community, local or national crisis resources, and policies that protect and support a student, students, or the campus community during a time of crisis. Crisis planning has the potential to positively impact preventive measures.

The two main objectives in this component are to facilitate an adequate and appropriate institutional response to student suicide, death, or other emergency, and to create and maintain protocols for the reporting of, and follow-up for, emergency situations.

  • Adequate and appropriate institutional response to student suicide, death, or other emergency – though the impact of a suicide, death or other emergency cannot be predicted and the response of a campus community can vary widely, clearly outlined emergency and postvention policy and protocol helps colleges respond to a crisis with coordinated, sensitive interventions at a time of potential campus instability. As you work on adjusting these policies on your campus JED recommends reviewing the HEMHA Postvention: A Guide for Response to Suicide on College Campuses guide.
  • Protocols for the reporting of, and follow-up for, emergency situations – clear protocols guide faculty and staff when a student is struggling, overly intoxicated, or suicidal and provide readily accessible emergency information including crisis phone numbers and how to access crisis chat and text services. Well-publicized and widely promoted “at risk” or Behavioral Intervention Teams serve to collect and respond to reports of students of concern.
    • JED Campus recommends that each campus develop or refine its own tailored protocols in response to emergency situations and mental health crises, including student suicide or death. The playbook resources include links to some response protocols that your campus might consider to guide your efforts in updating or developing your own campus protocols. JED Campus also recommends that the process of updating and developing campus protocols include consultation with legal counsel.
    • Recognizing the importance of each campus to have and take ownership of its specific policies and protocols, JED Campus staff are here to help. JED Campus staff are available to offer policy/protocol guidance as your campus develops and/or refines your current campus policies and protocols. Please remember, however, that JED Campus is unable to offer legal advice or consultation.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Follow Crisis Management Procedure domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: Emergency Response Protocols

FOLLOW CRISIS MANAGEMENT PROCEDURE:
EMERGENCY RESPONSE PROTOCOLS

This is one of two major objectives in the Follow Crisis Management Procedure Domain

Under this objective, schools may take the following action steps:

 

  • Develop an “At Risk” or “Behavioral Intervention Team (BIT)” to collect and respond to reports of students of concern. Ensure coordination between BIT or “At Risk” team and:
    • Counseling and health services
    • Substance abuse office
    • Conduct office
  • Promote information about how to report/get help for an emergency for both daytime and after-hours
  • Promote 24/7 crisis phone (and/or chat line) through campus resources or local/national services
  • Implement a case management system to help facilitate clinical follow up and continuity of care for students of concern. A case management system can be used to:
    • provide follow-up for students who have been hospitalized
    • provide follow-up for students who are served by the behavioral intervention team or “at risk” team
  • Develop/refine a family notification policy, compliant with FERPA, to be used in emergency situations
    • Schools “may disclose personally identifiable information from an education records to appropriate parties, including parents of an eligible student, in connection with an emergency if knowledge of the information is necessary to protect the health or safety of the student or other individuals.” 34 C.F.R. § 99.36

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Emergency Response Protocols, click here.

JED Recommendations: Postvention Response

FOLLOW CRISIS MANAGEMENT PROCEDURE:
POSTVENTION RESPONSE

 

This is one of two major objectives in the Follow Crisis Management Procedure Domain

Under this objective, schools may take the following action steps:

 

  • Develop or refine a postvention protocol to be consistent with the HEMHA Postvention Guide.
  • The postvention protocol should be easily accessible to relevant campus offices and staff. These offices might include:
    • Counseling services
    • Health services
    • Dean of Students or V.P. of Student Affairs
    • Residential Life
    • Campus Security
    • Legal Counsel
    • Campus ministry
  • The postvention plan should be reviewed/refined at least annually by all campus constituents who have a role in the postvention response.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources related to Postvention RESPONSE, click here.

JED Recommendations: Promote Means Safety

Promote Means Safety

 

The objective of this component is to reduce, limit, or restrict access to lethal means of suicide. Empirical data supports the importance of this strategy in suicide prevention. Additionally, means restriction requires coordination among several areas and offices in the university: buildings and facilities, security, counseling, student services, among others and should be included in inter-department strategic planning.
In this domain, schools will benefit from taking the following action steps:

 

  • Conduct an annual campus environmental scan to identify and mitigate access to lethal means. Access to the following should be restricted:
    • Rooftops
    • Windows
    • Balconies
    • Bridges
    • Atriums
  • Implement a policy limiting or containing firearms on campus.
  • Implement installation of breakaway closet rods in residence halls.
  • Implement protocols for controlling toxic substances found in laboratories which includes methods of tracking and monitoring materials.
  • Implement drug collection/drug return programs for prescription medications on campus.

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Promote Means Safety domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: STRATEGIC PLANNING

STRATEGIC PLANNING

 

 

 

Engaging in an active and dynamic strategic planning process is one of the most important things a school can do to ensure the future success of their mental health and substance abuse prevention programming. Strategic planning allows schools to anticipate and evaluate clinical and programming needs, examine how they deploy both personnel and financial resources to address challenges, coordinate efforts across campus, and evaluate programming effectiveness. Strategic planning will promote the ongoing support of program goals and the achievement of program outcomes—what is known as sustainability.

Critical to the success of a mental health strategic plan via the JED Comprehensive Approach is broad ownership and a shared commitment to reach common goals related to emotional health on campus. Additionally, involvement of upper administration demonstrates a commitment to mental health from the top-down, and helps build mental health infrastructure and leadership that ensure planning and programming succeed.

In this domain, schools should take the following action steps:

  • Implement campus-wide educational campaigns that promote shared responsibility for student emotional well-being.
  • Build an interdisciplinary team that draws on the resources and diverse perspectives of as many campus offices/services as possible. Broad participation in a task force demonstrates a real commitment to university-wide engagement in promoting mental health and suicide prevention measures. The team may include, but is not limited to:
    • senior leadership
    • student affairs
    • residence life
    • disability and accessibility services
    • multicultural affairs
    • international student services
    • security
    • legal
    • communications/public relations
    • financial aid
    • faculty
    • students
    • academic advisors
    • athletics
    • facilities
    • fraternity and sorority life (if applicable)
    • ministry (if applicable)
    • admissions
    • career services
  • Ensure the campus community is aware of the strategic plan and the work of the interdisciplinary team. Ideas for implementation include:
    • Providing the president or provost with a letter to send to the campus community supporting the JED Campus program and/or the work of the task force.
    • Creating a plan to distribute the strategic plan and regular updates to various stakeholders including trustees, administration, faculty, staff, students and families.

A well-structured mental health strategic plan should be a living document that is constantly reviewed and updated and utilized by various constituents on campus. When developing and maintaining your strategic plan, you should:

  • identify national and campus-specific problems and trends
  • prioritize campus-specific problems
  • use campus-specific data to inform planning and programming
  • define strategies and actions for addressing problems
  • designate team members who will work on each goal
  • evaluate the effectiveness of the activities and programs (interventions) outlined in the strategic plan (i.e., the activities/programs aimed at promoting mental health and preventing substance misuse and self-harm)
  • outline a strategy to collect and analyze campus-specific data to assess impact of actions and effectiveness of interventions and services
  • promote the ongoing support of program goals and the achievement of program outcomes–what is known as sustainability
  • integrate the mental health strategic plan into the school’s larger strategic plan
  • provide a system/strategy to assess budgetary needs for new programs/plans related to the implementation of the JED Campus and/or mental health strategic plan

THIS CONTENT CAN ALSO BE FOUND IN THE JED CAMPUS PLAYBOOK GUIDE.
To view all playbook resources within the Strategic Planning domain, click here.

JED Recommendations: Mindfulness

Mindfulness means paying attention to the present. When you’re mindful, you let yourself experience your sensations, thoughts and feelings without judging them as good or bad. Mindfulness keeps you engaged with the present and helps you to “go with the flow” of life.  Mindfulness is an important life skill to have, as you can use it every single day during every activity that you do, whether that is class, work, hanging out with friends, studying and so on.  The more you are able to breathe, pause, and be in the moment, the more you can stay focused, reduce stress, make better decisions and enhance your social and communication skills.

Click here to access resources on mindfulness.