Wed, Aug 27, 2003 - Page 7 News List

Students struggle to combat campus stress

SOUND ADVICE Instead of using food, drugs, alcohol or tobacco in an attempt to relieve stress, students can take healthy steps to solve problems

By Jane Brody  /  NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , NEW YORK

Students faced with stress often eat too much, not enough or the wrong foods. Here, Princeton students Yuan Yuan, left, and Toy Reid share a healthy meal.

PHOTO NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE

Adults are often quick to tell college students: "Enjoy

College counselors report a sharp increase in the need and demand for mental health services, and that can sometimes result in long waiting lists, making the troubled students' problems even worse.

In recent years, more than 80 percent of campuses have noted significant increases in serious psychological problems, including severe stress, depression, anxiety and panic attacks, according to an annual survey of counseling centers by Dr Robert Gallagher of the University of Pittsburgh.

Some of this emotional distress can be attributed to financial worries in these economically uncertain times. Looking at the dismal employment situation, many students with college loans fret about how they will be able to repay the money.

Furthermore, family support systems are not what they used to be for students whose parents are separated, divorced or remarried. Even within colleges, there may now be less support from peers, with the increase in nontraditional students who live on their own off campus rather than in dormitories.

But also a host of new drugs have enabled more students with mental illnesses to attend college.

These challenges can land on top of traditional causes of student distress like broken romantic relationships, bad grades, insufficient sleep, difficulty making friends, failing to join fraternities or sororities, homesickness or simply feeling overwhelmed by the amount of work that has to be done.

The burden is especially heavy for student athletes who constantly have to juggle the demands of schoolwork and teamwork and for students who have to work to help pay for their schooling.

It does not take much to send a vulnerable 18-year-old into an emotional descent. I recall feeling as if I were in an academic sinkhole and close to suffering an emotional meltdown at the start of my sophomore year.

Although I had good grades as a freshman biochemistry major, I began to doubt my interest in the field and questioned whether I had even chosen the right college.

I became anxious, depressed and paranoid, thinking that no one liked me and that everyone was speaking ill of me.

But before I abandoned my major and college, I consulted a psychologist at the campus health center, who helped to turn my academic goals and my outlook on college life in a more positive direction.

After tests and talk revealed no underlying mental illness, the therapist suggested that I find an activity that I might enjoy and that would help me feel more a part of college life.

So I joined my college's monthly magazine, began writing and editing science-related articles and eventually realized that my passion lay in writing about science rather than doing it. The rest is history.

Cigarettes and booze

Far too many students turn to tobacco and alcohol to assuage their emotional crises and, in the process, make them worse. Recent studies have shown, for example, that smoking cigarettes causes rather than alleviates stress.

The stress that smokers typically experience when not smoking is induced by nicotine withdrawal, prompting them to believe that they cannot cope without cigarettes.

But if they had not become hooked on nicotine to begin with or if they broke their addictions by quitting cigarettes (and nicotine replacements), most would eliminate the need to smoke to relieve stress.

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