‘When They Drop in and They Are Crying’: Experience of University Academics Supporting Students with Mental Health Problems
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis and Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Academics’ Perceptions of MHPs Amongst University Students
3.1.1. Academics’ Perceptions of Students with MHPs
‘I have witnessed a spurt in the number of students who have approached me regarding wanting to share personal difficulties… asking me for referrals to outside experts’[19].
‘He wrote a long email to me talking about the darkness in his life, shared about having tried to commit suicide earlier and the fact that he had completely stopped his medication in the last one month’[19].
‘Gradually,… he started opening up and shared about facing mental health difficulties since his school days’[19].
‘He told me that only I could understand him fully and he really appreciated my support’[19].
‘I conveyed my empathy and respected his decision to leave the course and wished him good luck’[19].
3.1.2. Academics’ Familiarity with MHPs in Students
‘Students with depression and anxiety is the most common… quite a few of them have already been diagnosed’ (P9—post-1992, M&HS)[26].
‘The season and clothes were not matching, wearing a mask all the time (FG3)’[25].
3.1.3. Perceived Causes of MHPs in Students
‘Students can gradually lose confidence in themselves, and they may have to repeat the year … they started to live alone, they can no longer eat properly (FG2)’[25].
GA: ‘I teach palliative care, so I tend to get… people come up to me at the end of lectures and talk to me about bereavements and such and so it is an issue that I do, sort of, it is something that happens quite a lot’[24].
‘… many students get messed up when they went to clinical practice and confronted people (FG3)’[24].
GA: Sometimes [mental health difficulties get] identified in practice and you’ll get a phone call or frantic email with concerns about a student in practice. I think that is one of my most difficult experience’[24].
‘… suicide issue and depression are really big [in families] as MHPs. (FG3)’. Relationships between a child and parent/s … I wonder if they drag mental [health] problems from childhood (FG1)’[25].
‘It is a stressed society’ (FG2)…’a nuclear society with nuclear families [and] it is the loneliness (FG1)’[25].
‘…Discussion on depression and mental problems from bullying or harassment are important (FG2)’[25].
‘There is a difference between stress and MHPs that needs to be relayed to both staff and students (SR—Russell Group, ET&NS)’. ‘Everyone gets anxious … this is different to a clinical diagnosis of anxiety (P2—other pre1992, ET&NS)’[26].
3.2. Supporting University Students with MHPs
3.2.1. Strategies for Supporting Students with MHPs
‘I am happy to talk with students, be with them during difficult times, and sort out practical problems (SR—Russell Group, ET&NS)’[26].
‘Said I was sorry she was having difficulties this semester…if I could do anything to help her successfully complete the semester to let me know’[22].
‘I suggested options for the student to consider in terms of accessing appropriate help and offered to facilitate that if necessary’[22].
‘I contacted his family and requested them to come to take him to the native place’[19].
‘Told them that I was amenable to adjusting deadlines for assessment or requirements of the course’[22].
‘I discussed it with the director of teaching and sought advice and assistance’[22].
‘I refer them to the disabilities service centre (DSC), who can make an assessment and identify where else they should be referred’[22].
‘Asked for their permission to make them an emergency appointment with the Counselling Centre and made that appointment in their presence. Offered to escort them to that appointment’[22].
‘I would be willing to provide online resources for students as a reference that will assist them in engaging professional support. Online self-help programmes are valuable if the person has already sought professional assistance and only requires additional assistance to help guide them’[21].
‘If I was to suggest going online to seek help, I would think this would in part reinforce the idea that they [students] are not valued. I would be more concerned that students would continue to feel isolated whilst seeking online help’[21].
‘I would worry it might lead to problematic self-diagnoses and may expose students to harmful online communities. I do not believe that online courses can substitute for face-to-face services’[21].
‘Students should be more involved and proactive in managing their mental health.’ ‘They should be empowered to assert their own wishes when they are well.’[20].
‘It has been my experience that when a person with a mental illness is doing well could be when they are in most danger of deciding to discontinue their medications, so I am a bit conflicted about a student writing what meds they want to be given (should their condition deteriorate) while they are feeling good because that is when many decide they do not really need meds any longer’[20].
3.2.2. Impacts of Supporting Students with MHPs
‘If you’re dealing with students who are experiencing paranoia or depression, then managing that student in the classroom is going to have an impact on your own mental health and sense of well-being and confidence (P1—post-1992, SS)’[26].
‘It is terrifying feeling responsible for a suicidal student and worrying if you have given the right advice … (SR—other pre-1992, M&HS)’[26].
‘ …it is also incredibly time-consuming and disruptive to work (SR—other pre-1992, M&HS)’[26].
3.3. Barriers to Supporting University Students with MHPs
3.4. Conflicting Roles and Responsibilities of Academics
GA: ‘But when they drop in and they are crying…with no appointment, so you go back to that, what feels very natural to me, the nurse–client relationship, not the teacher–student relationship’[24].
P5: ‘When I stopped being a practitioner to become an academic, I was worried that I’d stop being a practitioner and end up becoming [just] an academic and that hasn’t happened at all. It’s just like I am doing practice really’[24].
GA.3: ‘One of them (colleagues) was very clear to say to her colleagues, ‘you are their personal tutor, you are not their therapist’ I think we struggle’[24].
‘I do not want to deal with any student health issues. I don’t want a student to act on my advice, simply because I am in a position of authority, and then later blame me if that advice was inappropriate’[21].
‘I would be concerned about making them uncomfortable by indicating or suggesting that I think they would need help. It might be a bit awkward. I wouldn’t want to embarrass the student’[21].
P14: ‘I’m not here as a practising occupational therapist, you know… but I have that knowledge and that background that helps me pick up on those things’[24].
‘… there are many things that academics don’t understand even if we are involved … it’s best for the specialist to support them… (FG2)’[25].
‘I am not a medical doctor or a social worker or a carer, it is not my job to support people with mental health issues (SR—Russell Group, A&H)’[26].
‘Nothing. The issue was (and should be) dealt with by more qualified people who should advise the lecturer if they need to do anything’[22].
‘I was not sure what to do’[22].
P5: ‘When I stopped being a practitioner to become an academic, I was worried that I’d stop being a practitioner and end up becoming [just] an academic and that hasn’t happened at all. It’s just like I am doing practice really’[24].
P9: ‘The thing I find most difficult is that we do have a good relationship with our students… when they come to you, they don’t really want you to send them somewhere else’[24].
3.5. Mental Health Literacy of Academics
‘I don’t know anything about them and do not feel qualified to be able to direct students to reputable ones’[21].
‘I’m not trained, I’m not a professional’[26].
GA.1: ‘It is difficult because we are not just academic staff, we are on a professional register as well and it is difficult to keep these two things apart…’[24].
‘I have generally found such sessions unhelpful. The advice offered tends to be trite and/or bureaucratic. Presenters seldom have knowledge of the reality of the classroom’[22].
3.6. Students’ Attitudes to Academics’ Support
‘They may not even realise whether they are strange or normal…a ‘[lack of] self-awareness (FG2)’[25].
‘Even when they (students) have poor mental health, they don’t take the initiative to go to the hospital outside unless it is so bad (FG1)’[25].
‘When the student comes to the counsellor’s office, … I think that they worry about ‘the eyes’ around them … students don’t want to be seen with ‘such eyes’ (FG2)’[25].
‘So, it may be pride … or they may be embarrassed … and being ashamed as well … and when the people label the student, in the form of ‘he/she is such a person (FG2)’[25].
3.7. Organisational Barriers to Support
‘… even though I want to take time and thoroughly listen to this student … we cannot have time and a place in the environment… (FG2)’[25].
‘… many students get messed up when they went to clinical practice and confronted people. (FG3)’[24].
GA: ‘Sometimes [mental health difficulties get] identified in practice and you’ll get a phone call or frantic email with concerns about a student in practice. I think that is one of my most difficult experiences’[24].
4. Discussion
4.1. Strengths and Limitations
4.2. Recommendations
- Universities need to provide clarity about ‘academic’ and ‘clinical’ roles to university academics to help them provide timely and appropriate support to students with MHPs.
- Universities need to embark on efforts to improve mental health literacy of university academics and university students.
- Universities need to provide a workable mechanism to support the mental health of university academics to mitigate any negative impacts of supporting students with MHPs.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion | Exclusion | |
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Study design and characteristics |
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Population/ participants |
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Exposure |
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Outcome |
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Author/ Country | Aims | Participants’ Age and Gender | Participants’ Professional Characteristics | Methods | Data Analysis |
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[19] India | To contextualise students’ challenges and gauge its implications for the social work programme | N: 1 A: N/A G: 0/1 | T: lecturer, fieldwork supervisor P: PG E: N/A D: Social work | Case vignettes | Case narratives |
[20] United States of America | To provide information on faculty knowledge of mental health problems in students, their use of available accommodations and strategies, and their willingness to accept psychiatric advance directives. | N: 168 A: 47 G: 82/86 | T: lecturers P: UG and PG E:14 D: N/A | Open-ended questionnaire | Thematic analysis |
[21] Australia | To ascertain teaching staff experiences of providing support to students with mental health problems and their awareness and willingness to recommend online mental health resources to students. | N: 224 A: 41.6 G: 113/110/1 | T: lecturers, tutors, course convenors and research supervisors P: UG and PG E: 10 D: Sciences, Business, Law | Mixed-method including online questionnaire | Thematic and statistical analyses |
[22] Australia | To investigate university teaching staff experiences of, and training needs around, assisting students with mental health problems. | N: 224 A: 41.6 G: 113/110/1 | T: lecturers, tutors, course convenors and research supervisors P: UG and PG E: 10 D: Sciences, Business, Law | Mixed-method including online questionnaire | Thematic and statistical analyses |
[23] Australia | To investigate university teaching staff literacy and the stigma they attach to depression and assess the influence of this on their assistance of students with mental health problems. | N: 224 A: 41.6 G: 113/110/1 | T: lecturers, tutors, course convenors and research supervisors P: UG and PG E: 10 D: Sciences, Business, Law | Mixed-method including online questionnaire | Thematic and statistical analyses |
[24] United Kingdom | To explore how academics on nursing and healthcare programmes are managing their roles and responsibility in relation to student mental health. | N: 14 A: N/A G: 2/12 | T: lecturers, tutors, programme leads, P: N/A E: N/A D: Nursing, medicine and healthcare | Semi-structured individual interviews and focus groups | Thematic analysis |
[25] Japan | To explore the attitudes, beliefs, knowledge and practices of university academics towards health science students with psychological/mental health issues. | N: 15 A: 44.2 G: 1/14 | T: lecturers, professors P: UG and PG E: 6.8 D: health science | Semi-structured interview with focus groups | Thematic analysis |
[10] Australia | To explore the nature, extent, and impacts of interactions between university staff engaging with students who disclose that they are experiencing a mental health challenge. | N: 22 A: N/A G: N/A | T: academic staff P: N/A E: N/A D: N/A | Semi-structured interview | Thematic analysis |
[26] United Kingdom | To explore how academics in different types of institution and subject areas perceive mental health problems amongst students, and how have they experienced working with students with mental health problems. | N: 130 A: N/A G: N/A | T: lecturers and research supervisors P: N/A E: N/A D: N/A | Online survey and semi-structured interviews | Statistical and thematic analyses |
Anand [19] | Brockelman and Scheyett [20] | Farrer, Gulliver [21] | Gulliver, Farrer [22] | Gulliver, Farrer [23] | Hughes and Byrom [24] | McAllister, Wynaden [10] | McMaster [25] | Spear, Morey [26] | |
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Was there a clear statement of the aims of the research? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Is a qualitative methodology appropriate? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Was the research design appropriate to address the aims of the research? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Was the recruitment strategy appropriate to the aims of the research? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Was the data collected in a way that addressed the research issue? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Has the relationship between researcher and participants been adequately considered? | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | N | N |
Have ethical issues been taken into consideration? | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Was the data analysis sufficiently rigorous? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Is there a clear statement of findings? | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
How valuable is the research? | V | V | V | V | V | V | V | V | V |
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Akinlotan, O.; Wagstaff, C. ‘When They Drop in and They Are Crying’: Experience of University Academics Supporting Students with Mental Health Problems. Healthcare 2025, 13, 1792. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13151792
Akinlotan O, Wagstaff C. ‘When They Drop in and They Are Crying’: Experience of University Academics Supporting Students with Mental Health Problems. Healthcare. 2025; 13(15):1792. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13151792
Chicago/Turabian StyleAkinlotan, Oladapo, and Christopher Wagstaff. 2025. "‘When They Drop in and They Are Crying’: Experience of University Academics Supporting Students with Mental Health Problems" Healthcare 13, no. 15: 1792. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13151792
APA StyleAkinlotan, O., & Wagstaff, C. (2025). ‘When They Drop in and They Are Crying’: Experience of University Academics Supporting Students with Mental Health Problems. Healthcare, 13(15), 1792. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13151792