Institute for Health Transformation & School of Health & Social Development, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC, Australia.
Melbourne School of Population & Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Jan 25;23(1):170. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15123-x.
There are growing concerns about the mental health of university students in Australia and internationally, with universities, governments and other stakeholders actively developing new policies and practices. Previous research suggests that many students experience poor mental health while at university, and that the risk may be heightened for international students. Mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviours are modifiable determinants of mental health and thus suitable targets for intervention. This study assessed the mental health-related knowledge, stigmatising attitudes, helping behaviours, and self-reported experiences of mental health problems in the student population of a large multi-campus Australian university, and conducted a comparative assessment of international and domestic students.
Participants were 883 international and 2,852 domestic students (overall response rate 7.1%) who completed an anonymous voluntary online survey that was sent to all enrolled students in July 2019 (n = ~ 52,341). Various measures of mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and helping behaviours were assessed. A comparative analysis of international and domestic students was conducted, including adjustment for age and sex.
Overall, there was evidence of improvements in mental health-related knowledge, attitudes and behaviours relative to previous studies, including higher depression recognition, intentions to seek help, and reported help-seeking behaviour. Comparative analysis indicated that international students scored predominantly lower on a range of indicators (e.g., depression recognition, awareness of evidence-based forms of help); however, differences were narrower difference between the two groups compared to what has been reported previously. Finally, some indicators were more favourable among international students, such as higher help-seeking intentions, and lower prevalence of self-reported mental health problems compared to domestic students.
Though there were some important differences between domestic and international students in this study, differences were narrower than observed in previous studies. Study findings are informing the on-going implementation and refinement of this university's student mental health strategy, and may be used to inform evolving policy and practice in the university sector.
在澳大利亚和国际上,人们对大学生的心理健康越来越关注,大学、政府和其他利益相关者正在积极制定新的政策和实践。先前的研究表明,许多学生在大学期间经历了较差的心理健康,而国际学生的风险可能更高。心理健康相关知识、态度和行为是心理健康的可改变决定因素,因此是干预的合适目标。本研究评估了一所大型多校区澳大利亚大学学生群体的心理健康相关知识、污名化态度、帮助行为以及心理健康问题的自我报告体验,并对国际学生和国内学生进行了比较评估。
参与者包括 883 名国际学生和 2852 名国内学生(总体回应率为 7.1%),他们于 2019 年 7 月完成了一项匿名自愿在线调查,该调查被发送给所有注册学生(约 52341 人)。评估了心理健康相关知识、态度和帮助行为的各种衡量标准。对国际学生和国内学生进行了比较分析,包括年龄和性别调整。
总体而言,与先前的研究相比,心理健康相关知识、态度和行为均有改善的迹象,包括更高的抑郁识别率、寻求帮助的意愿和报告的寻求帮助行为。比较分析表明,国际学生在一系列指标上的得分普遍较低(例如,抑郁识别率、对循证帮助形式的认识);然而,与先前报告的情况相比,两组之间的差异较小。最后,一些指标在国际学生中更为有利,例如更高的寻求帮助意愿,以及与国内学生相比,自我报告的心理健康问题的患病率较低。
尽管在这项研究中,国内学生和国际学生之间存在一些重要差异,但与先前的研究相比,差异较小。研究结果正在为该大学学生心理健康战略的持续实施和完善提供信息,并可能用于为大学部门不断发展的政策和实践提供信息。