Search results
- The GW Hatchet
Student-athletes call for mental health support amid fundraising push for services
After the hiring of the University’s first student-athlete mental health specialist this semester, athletes reported a need for additional mental health support from the Athletics Department ...
2 days ago
- Chicago Sun-Times
About 25% of Americans will struggle with mental health. Let's end stigmas around seeking help.
Every day, however, stigma stops countless among us from reaching out for mental health help — even though our brains include 86 billion neurons with as many as 100 trillion connections enabled ...
2 hours ago
People also ask
Do student athletes suffer from mental health problems?
Do young athletes have mental health problems?
How does mental health affect a student-athlete's physical health?
Mental health problems (e.g., anxiety, feeling sad or overwhelmed) for student-athletes generally have improved since 2020, but are still at relatively high levels. Women, BIPOC and LGBTQ+ student-athletes reported the highest rates of mental health struggles.
Young athletes can experience a variety of mental health problems tied to playing a sport, including: Associating Winning with Self-Worth. A strong competitive instinct is the mark of a great athlete. But young athletes may take it particularly hard when a personal setback occurs.
Jan 25, 2024 · Still, only 43% of student athletes report they feel comfortable going to a coach with their mental health concerns. This resource looks at the science behind student athlete mental health, some solutions, and suggestions for the students, their coaches, and their parents.
Mar 13, 2022 · For one, student-athletes’ injuries present a risk of post-traumatic stress, said Dr. Josh Norman, an attending psychiatrist at Ohio State University’s Jameson Crane Sports Medicine Institute.
May 24, 2022 · As a follow-up to two NCAA student-athlete well-being studies conducted in 2020, student-athletes continue to report elevated levels of mental health concerns. The data indicated rates of mental exhaustion, anxiety and depression have seen little change since fall 2020 and remain 1.5 to two times higher than identified before the COVID-19 pandemic.
Findings suggest that student-athletes often have limited knowledge about how to access existing resources. Moreover, students frequently report feeling sigmatized when teammates, coaches, parents, and family see them as needing mental health help (Gulliver, et al., 2012).
Dec 13, 2023 · Chris Radford. Media Center. Posted: 12/13/2023 9:00:00 AM. Data from the NCAA Student-Athlete Health and Wellness Study shows student-athletes are reporting fewer mental health concerns than they did during the height of the pandemic, although the improvements are smaller in some demographics.