Mental Health Disparities Among College Students of Color.

Sarah Ketchen Lipson, Adam Kern, Daniel Eisenberg, Alfiee M Breland-Noble
Author Information
  1. Sarah Ketchen Lipson: Boston University School of Public Health, Department of Health Law Policy and Management, Boston, Massachusetts. Electronic address: sklipson@umich.edu.
  2. Adam Kern: Washington University in St. Louis, George Warren Brown School of Social Work, St. Louis, Missouri.
  3. Daniel Eisenberg: University of Michigan School of Public Health, Department of Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan Institute for Social Research, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
  4. Alfiee M Breland-Noble: Georgetown University Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry, Washington, DC.

Abstract

PURPOSE: Understanding the mental health needs of students of color is a growing priority on college and university campuses nationwide. This study aims to capture the state of mental health among students of color, including the prevalence of mental health problems and treatment utilization.
METHODS: The sample is comprised of 43,375 undergraduate and graduate students at 60 institutions that participated in the survey-based Healthy Minds Study from 2012 to 2015. These data include over 13,000 students of color; we look separately at African-American, Latinx, Asian/Asian American, and Arab/Arab American students. Data are analyzed at the individual level using bivariate and multivariate modeling to elucidate variations across race/ethnicity. We examine symptom prevalence (measured by validated screens such as the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 for depression), help-seeking behaviors, and related factors (including knowledge and stigma).
RESULTS: Across race/ethnicity, we find modest variation in symptom prevalence and larger variation in service utilization. Overall, treatment use is lower among students of color relative to white students, even when controlling for other variables in regression models. Asian/Asian American students have the lowest prevalence of treatment, at only 20% among those with apparent mental health conditions. Attitudes related to mental health treatment also vary significantly and help to explain the primary findings.
CONCLUSIONS: College students of color represent a disparities population based on greater levels of unmet mental health needs relative to white students. This paper takes an important step toward understanding these needs and points to implications for future research and practice.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Ethnicity
Female
Health Status Disparities
Humans
Male
Mental Disorders
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Prevalence
Racial Groups
Social Stigma
Students
Surveys and Questionnaires
Universities

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0studentsmentalhealthcolorprevalencetreatmentneedsamongAmericanCollegeincludingutilizationAsian/Asianrace/ethnicitysymptomHealthrelatedvariationrelativewhiteDisparitiesPURPOSE:UnderstandinggrowingprioritycollegeuniversitycampusesnationwidestudyaimscapturestateproblemsMETHODS:samplecomprised43375undergraduategraduate60institutionsparticipatedsurvey-basedHealthyMindsStudy20122015datainclude13000lookseparatelyAfrican-AmericanLatinxArab/ArabDataanalyzedindividuallevelusingbivariatemultivariatemodelingelucidatevariationsacrossexaminemeasuredvalidatedscreensPatientQuestionnaire-9depressionhelp-seekingbehaviorsfactorsknowledgestigmaRESULTS:AcrossfindmodestlargerserviceOveralluselowerevencontrollingvariablesregressionmodelslowest20%apparentconditionsAttitudesalsovarysignificantlyhelpexplainprimaryfindingsCONCLUSIONS:representdisparitiespopulationbasedgreaterlevelsunmetpapertakesimportantsteptowardunderstandingpointsimplicationsfutureresearchpracticeMentalAmongStudentsColorAdolescentyoungadultCampusHelp-seekingPrevalence

Similar Articles

Cited By