1. University students' access to mental health services: A qualitative study of the experiences of health service professionals through the lens of candidacy in England.
- Author
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Osborn, Tom G, Town, Rosa, Bawendi, Majeed, Stapley, Emily, Saunders, Rob, and Fonagy, Peter
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NATIONAL health services , *MENTAL health services , *QUALITATIVE research , *FAMILY medicine , *PSYCHIATRIC treatment , *COMPUTER software , *RESEARCH funding , *MENTAL illness , *INTERVIEWING , *WORK environment , *STATISTICAL sampling , *PRIVACY , *EMOTIONS , *JUDGMENT sampling , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *HELP-seeking behavior , *THEMATIC analysis , *INSTITUTIONAL cooperation , *PSYCHOLOGY , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *RESEARCH methodology , *SOCIAL skills , *COLLEGE students , *COUNSELING , *NEEDS assessment , *SOCIAL support , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *UNIVERSITY & college administration , *PROFESSIONAL-student relations , *SOCIAL stigma , *MEDICAL ethics - Abstract
Objectives: In order to develop a better understanding of students' access to mental health services, we explored the experiences of health care professionals interacting with university students with mental health problems. Methods: We interviewed 23 professionals working across university advice and counselling services, NHS general practice, crisis, and psychological services in North and East London between June 2022 and January 2023. Our approach drew on reflexive thematic analysis and the principles of abductive analysis. The notion of candidacy – that is, how different needs are deemed deserving of health service attention – was particularly helpful to our understanding of the ongoing phenomenon of interest in the data. Results: Each student's access to mental health support was highly contingent on the student's dynamic social context and the pressures and organisation of the local health system. Professionals described how different students viewed different needs as deserving of health service attention. Which students reached the professional's service depended on the resources and relationships a student could draw upon, and the service's relative permeability. Once there, what action professionals took was strongly influenced by the professional's service expertise, resource constraints, the relationships the professional's service had with other organisations, the students' wishes, and whether students regarded treatment offers as acceptable. Conclusions: Candidacy offers a useful lens to view university students' access to mental health support. Access appears to be an increasingly intricate task for students, given the fragmented service landscape, surging demand for mental health care and challenges of emerging adulthood. Our findings suggest that policy goals to increase use of mental health services are unlikely to improve outcomes for students without policy makers and health systems giving holistic consideration of inter-service relationships and available resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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