Transcript Slide 1

Supporting students with mental health
difficulties
Kirsty Wayland [email protected]
Lisa Halpern [email protected]
Objectives
• To discuss the impact that studying for a PhD can have on
mental health
• To consider the barriers in a PhD for students with mental
health conditions
• To update on support available for students with mental
health conditions
• To develop interpersonal skills which can help manage
such situations
Services available – Disability Resource Centre
• Advice, Guidance, Assessment and Support for disabled
students and those staff supporting them
• Training: Bespoke and with PPD
• Disability Equality related advice and guidance
• Advise on institutional policy for disabled students
• Resources and Equipment
• Events
Services available - UCS
Spectrum from well-being to severe conditions
• Well-being
- Self-help info and topic-specific workshops/groups
• Mild to moderate mental health difficulties
- Counselling, CBT & groups (self-referral)
• Acute crises; more severe/ongoing MH conditions
- MHAs can be contacted directly by staff for advice & support, or to
arrange an assessment, including fitness to study procedures
Services available – locally (part 1)
• Extent to which individuals are involved with the local MH
services will vary considerably; shortfalls in service
provision are almost inevitable
• Access to specialist services is extremely limited for all
students, due to systemic cuts/high triage threshold when
compared to local population
• GPs usually the central contact, both in a crisis and ongoing
(along with out-of-hours teams)
• Visa/immigration status may mean limited or curtailed
services for some international postgrads
Services available – locally (part 2)
• Addenbrooke's Accident and Emergency (A & E)
• Cambridge GP
• Urgent Care Cambridge (out of hours GP service)
• CAMEO early intervention service for psychosis
• Samaritans- email, telephone or in person (local and
national)
PhDs- an ordinary risk to mental health?
• ‘A long and lonely business’
• Postgrads also engaged in the activities of adult life- may
have partners, children, aging or ill parents, debts, issues
with health… and all the rest!
• Imposter syndrome, perfectionism- setting oneself an
impossible standard to achieve, never feeling good enough
• Sci PhDs completed more quickly & in greater numbers
than Soc Sci and Arts & Hums PhDs because  isolation,
 involvement with supervisors, more regulated work
ethos/lab routines……
but this also brings its own challenges…..
Studying for PhD with a Mental Health Condition
• Long periods of isolated study can increase obsessive rumination or
paralysed procrastination… leading to avoidance/absenteeism
• Depression can  tendency to focus in the negative, thereby increasing
depressive and anxious symptoms
• Lab gossip and difficulties with colleagues can  social anxiety and
mistrust, even paranoia
• Side-effects of psychotropic meds: may impair concentration and
memory, cause drowsiness, lethargy, dry mouth etc
• Some MH conditions include a risk of relapse, and may require time off
or hospital admission. Relapse risk may be  by deadlines, vivas
Additional considerations for international
students?
• Pressure to succeed- PhD is not just for self but for family
and community (and possibly one’s employer)
• Financial pressures- economy at home may be unstable,
grant money or living expenses may be shared with
relatives
• Different health systems & medications; different remedies
• Cultural norms/attitudes re disclosing MH difficulties or
seeking professional help
• Lack of former support network, social isolation, hostile or
unfriendly attitudes/encounters with people in UK
Strategies for supporting PhD students
• Adjustments for studs with MH difficulties benefit all students
• ‘Better’ may not be the goal for all students, rather ‘living with’
• Level of support needed may fluctuate. Most illness are episodic, and
many students will have extended periods where they do not need or
want any special consideration.
• Be guided by each student’s ability to cope with the academic
requirements, not by the diagnosis.
• Anticipate potential relapse triggers- the ‘stress vulnerability model’
Supporting PhD students
• Regular scheduled contact
• Information about who to contact, when, and why
• Liaising with other relevant people to ensure consistent support
• Review of support on a regular basis
• Consideration of ways to manage sensory overload
• Clarity around rules, regulations, deadlines and all expectations, and
where there can be flexibility
• Time to access scheduled support
• Access arrangements for vivas
What are ‘Reasonable Adjustments’?
The Equality Act continues the existing duty upon universities to make
reasonable adjustments for staff, students and service users in relation
to:
• a provision, criteria or practice
• physical features
• auxiliary aids
Education providers have a duty to make reasonable adjustments to
ensure disabled people do not face ‘substantial disadvantage’ in
comparison with non-disabled people.
The duty remains anticipatory.
Examples of reasonable adjustments
•
Flexible booking policy for equipment
•
Non-Medical Assistants (e.g. mentors)
•
Access arrangements for assessments
•
Working hour adjustments
•
Adjustments around attendance at meetings
•
Adjustments around participating in presentations
Considering reasonableness
• Competence standards
• The costs of reasonable adjustments cannot be passed
onto the disabled person
• The provisions of the Equality Act apply equally to
international students
• Efficacy
• Practice across the HE sector
• Relevant OIA and court cases
Scenarios
Aaron has disclosed depression via email after several weeks
of poor attendance and some irritability with his peers. He
comes to see you to discuss this.
How do you start the conversation? What would you want
to tell him and what would you want to know?
Scenarios
Bella is a committed competent student who is quiet in group
settings and friendly but not friends with anyone in the group.
She puts in more hours than anyone else. She is clearly
underweight and does not engage with you about any
personal matters.
What do you do?
Scenarios
Kim is an international student who has disclosed PTSD. He
describes concern about speaking in front of or in groups and
dealing with pressure.
How might you support Kim in your group?
Scenarios
Clarissa is an American postgrad in physics, who has
submitted the first chapter of her thesis after a series of
delays. She plans to make a visit home in a few days. Twothirds of the way into the draft, there is a passing reference to
her research being of interest to the US government because
it has implications for matters of international security. Five
pages later she repeats this, implying she may attempt to
speak with President Obama about it in the near future.
What do you do?
Interpersonal skills – helper dynamics
• Crisis or a drama? What’s going on and why? Should you
intervene? Who else can help?
• Inappropriate/ odd behaviours- can feel confusing,
disturbing, unsettling
• That sixth sense- what does your instinct/intuition say? Is
this normal distress/social engagement?
• The ‘ripple effect’- lack of boundaries/boundaried
behaviour, “Institutional anxiety.”
Helper dynamics- some thoughts
• What goes on with students? What happens in the relationships around
the student? What happens for us as helpers?
• Boundaries: what is it appropriate to do? What is not appropriate to do?
Over-responsibility vs under-engagement and inflexibility
• Victim, Rescuer and Persecutor- ‘the drama triangle’
• Staff members helping a student with a PD or a MH condition need
support & a sounding board
• Involving others, clarifying where others fit in- the larger picture