Skip to main content

“PACEs

Students seeking mental health help kicked out of colleges to prevent ‘bad PR’ [RawStory.com]

 

We hear from Jasmine, who struggled with depression at the University of Chicago. She went to the student counseling center to ask for help (she makes it clear she was not suicidal). They made her get in an ambulance, says Jasmine, “which was really embarrassing.” She was kept in a psychiatric ward for two weeks. She then met with school officials who informed her she had to move her stuff out of her dorm “within 48 hours,” and that she was no longer a student there.

“Did you feel it was voluntary?” asks Farrow. “No,” says Jasmine emphatically. “No.”

There’s also Rachel, who sought help for “depression and cutting” while at Yale. The school put her in a psych ward, and while she was institutionalized, she received a letter stating she “was no longer enrolled.” Rachel reapplied to Yale and got back in, and now she, along with other student activists, are calling for a “more humane approach.”

Are forced mental leaves ethical? Are they even effective? Why are colleges so quick to kick out students who seek mental health care?

Victor Schwartz, the former director of NYU’s counseling services, puts it bluntly: “Suicide is a bad PR problem for the school.”



[For more of this story, written by Sarah Beller, go to https://www.rawstory.com/2016/...s-to-prevent-bad-pr/]

Add Comment

Comments (1)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

There is so much political talk about the need for mental health services and support, but many institutions do not know how to respond to mental health needs in a truly compassionate and healing way.  I think schools may be especially challenged in this area.  Not just related to bad PR, but punishing and shaming rather than having a focus on healing mental health disorders that present themselves at school, which just intensifies the student's struggle. 

Post
Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×