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97 Foreign Aff. 150 (2018)
Generation Stress

handle is hein.journals/fora97 and id is 1250 raw text is: 




Generation Stress


The Mental Health Crisis on Campus

Sylvia Mathews Burwell


t is supposed to be the time of their life-the halcyon days of college,
    when young adults grow, acquire knowledge, and learn new skills. But
    according to the 2016-17 Healthy Minds Study, an annual survey of
mental health on American college campuses, while 44 percent of students
said that they were flourishing, 39 percent reported experiencing symp-
toms of depression or anxiety. The proportion of students experiencing
suicidal ideation has grown from six percent in 2007 to 11 percent in 2017.
The percentage of students receiving psychotherapy has jumped from
13 percent to 24 percent over the same period. Even though more stu-
dents are getting help, only a little more than half of those with symptoms
of depression and anxiety had received treatment in the previous year.
   The rise in mental health challenges is not limited to college students.
One in every four adults in the United States will suffer from an anxiety
disorder in the course of his or her lifetime, and suicide rates for men
and women have risen since 2000. Whether these figures are a passing
trend, the new normal, or a harbinger of greater challenges to come,
one cannot fully know. But no matter what, universities need to deal
with this uptick in psychological distress. No longer can they consider
students' mental health to be outside their area of responsibility.
   Nowadays, that responsibility has broadened to include increasing
students' resiliency-that is, helping them not just avoid stress but
also develop the tools to work through it. Resiliency is about decreasing
students' sense of overwhelming stress while fostering their growing
autonomy to tackle difficult life challenges. It's also about treating their
very real depression and anxiety.
   Taking responsibility for students' mental health needs is particularly
complex at a time when universities are rightfully under pressure about
SYLVIA MATHEWS BURWELL is President of American University. From 2014 to 2017,
she was U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services.


150 FOREIGN AFFAIRS

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