Morning keynote address, Prof Steven West, University of Bristol

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Supporting Student Mental Wellbeing: Policy, Practice and Future Directions February 2015 Professor Steve West Vice-Chancellor UWE Bristol Chair University Alliance President Business West Chair CBI South West Chair West of England Academic Health Science Network

Transcript of Morning keynote address, Prof Steven West, University of Bristol

Page 1: Morning keynote address, Prof Steven West, University of Bristol

Supporting Student Mental Wellbeing: Policy, Practice and Future DirectionsFebruary 2015

Professor Steve WestVice-Chancellor UWE BristolChair University AlliancePresident Business WestChair CBI South WestChair West of England Academic Health Science Network

Page 2: Morning keynote address, Prof Steven West, University of Bristol

Why is this important for HE?• 1 in 6 adults have a

mental health problem at any one time

• Referrals and applications to university well-being services increased between 25 and 37% in a year

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Demand at UWE BristolIn 2013/14 our well-being service worked with:• 185 students who had previously attempted suicide (28 of those having current plans to

end their lives)• 501 students who had suicidal thoughts but no specific plan • 184 students who were currently self-harming • 446 students with a history of self-harming

Activities included:• 1,404 students provided with scheduled counselling, mental health support and mentoring• 300 crisis/duty appointments• 450 crisis/duty phone calls

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Changing profile of the student population

50% of young people entering higher education

– Entry rates for 18 year-olds from most disadvantaged neighbourhoods of England increased over 70% since 2004 to reach 17% in 2013

– International students increased to 435,500 in 2013/14

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Vulnerabilities of student population - transition

Success - new source of self-esteem and opportunities for engagement with peers and the wider society

Underachievement - long-term negative effects on self-esteem, the progress of someone’s future life

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Broader social role of universities

• Increase in healthy university initiatives

• Promoting health and well-being in students, staff and the wider community

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Developments at UWE Bristol53% rise in applications to Well-being Service - 2011/12 to 2013/14

Therapeutic consultation - 90 minute solution-focused sessionAutumn Term 2014/15:

• 472 students attended TCs• 73 students (15%) went on to have just 1 counselling appointment • 29 students (6%) went on to have 2 counselling appointments• 8 students (1.7%) went on to have 3 counselling appointments• 6 students (1.3%) went on to have 4, 5 or 6 counselling appointments

Duty system with at least two Wellbeing Practitioners on duty each day• Of 809 online registration forms received in Autumn 2014/15, 127 students (15.7%) were

considered to be ‘at risk’

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Critical agenda with many challenges

• Significant financial constraints across public sector

• Students with unrecognised and untreated mental illnesses are likely to increase these costs– Loss of return on the public investment in higher

education – Dropout rates will lead to diminished earning capacity

and an increased risk of dependence on state benefits

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Integration and efficiency critical• Overcoming practical

impediments

• Learning from successful models of collaborative working

• Modes of delivery that enhance the student experience and promote student responsibility and risk awareness