Australian universities are finally being pushed into serious action over student mental health, amid warnings that the sector is âlagging behindâ its competitors.
A report by the Higher Education Standards Panel, , included a call for all universities to produce institution-wide mental health strategies. Education minister Simon Birmingham, who released the report last month,  universities and agencies to act on all of its 18 recommendations.
Student mental health advocate Benjamin Veness said this was good news, but that the devil lay in the detail. âTo what standard are universities expected to develop the mental health strategy? Whoâs going to be responsible for checking and evaluating its implementation? What timelines are being put around this?â he asked.
These details are still to be determined, with an implementation plan for the 18 recommendations not due until the end of the year. Dr Veness said the danger was that âinstitutions will pay lip service to it, and it will become another document that doesnât lead to meaningful change. But what buoys me is that some institutions, independently of the ministerâs mandate, are taking the issue seriously.â
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A trainee psychiatrist and former president of the Australian Medical Studentsâ Association, Dr Veness became aware of widespread student mental health problems as an elected member of the University of Sydney senate. His interest culminated in a 2013 Churchill fellowship to investigate the issue, and a 2016Â Â on prevention and early intervention strategies.
His report offered 39 recommendations arranged around seven themes. The first was that a âtone at the topâ must commit each university to improving its studentsâ mental health and well-being.
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While Australian universities routinely offer mental health services, only a smattering have institution-wide strategies. Dr Veness said student mental health was a âgrumbling issueâ that the sector had long neglected.
But a confluence of factors â financial pressures, snowballing enrolments, an influx of international students, growth of online education and a burgeoning recognition of mental illness as a broader societal problem â had brought it to the fore.
âIn the longer term, I canât see how universities are going to avoid the issue. More and more students are coming to the attention of staff or counselling services and institutions are struggling to respond,â he said.
âUniversities will have to find a way of shifting to an early intervention and prevention approach with an appropriate triage service that links with community mental health supports. Until that happens theyâre going to keep butting their heads against the issue â in some cases, major problems may force a change.â
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Those problems could be tragedies like recent suicides by international students in Canberra and medical students in Hobart. In the UK, the suicides of 10 University of Bristol students have put the spotlight on mental health across the entire student population.
An alternative to that sort of public relations nightmare scenario is that âa vice-chancellor or another senior person gets it, and decides that proactively addressing the issue should be a defining feature of their termâ, Dr Veness said.
While James Cook University in northern Queensland has established an , the first forum of its type in Australia, Dr Veness said Australiaâs approach to the issue was ânascentâ.
Unlike Canada, the US and the UK, Australia has no leading not-for-profit organisation taking on student mental health as a core issue, he said. âWeâre really lagging behind.â
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