糖心Vlog

College counsellors increasingly seeing traumatised students

Support services in US forced to adapt due to rise in students reporting childhood emotional abuse and sexual violence

Published on
February 7, 2024
Last updated
February 7, 2024
A counsellor talks to a student
Source: iStock

Nearly half of students who attend college counselling sessions say they have experienced trauma, according to聽聽from the Center for Collegiate Mental Health (CCMH) at Pennsylvania State University. That represents an increase of nearly 10聽percentage points since the data were first reported in 2012, from 37.5聽per cent to 46.8聽per cent.

As a result, college counselling centres are looking to hire therapists with expertise in treating trauma and to make their centres friendlier to students who have experienced traumatising events.

While it鈥檚 hard to pinpoint the exact causes of the surge in trauma among college students, mental health counsellors suspect that the changing definition of trauma 鈥 as well as the declining stigma young people attach to it 鈥 have played a role.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a growing understanding that trauma doesn鈥檛 have to be this one catastrophic event,鈥 said Katie Shade, a clinician with Florida State University鈥檚 Counseling and Psychological Services. She added that trauma聽could result from not having your needs met in childhood, for example.

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According to CCMH鈥檚 report, the two types of trauma that have increased the most dramatically among college students in counselling are childhood emotional abuse and sexual violence.

Ms Shade also noted that clinicians聽were becoming better at determining when students have experienced trauma, even if the students themselves don鈥檛 necessarily see their experiences as traumatic.

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In-house treatment

As the incidence of trauma among college students has risen, so too has the number of colleges that offer post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) treatment in their counselling聽centres.

At FSU, the majority of clinicians have been trained in a treatment called EMDR, including nearly 20 practitioners who received EMDR training on the college鈥檚 dime last spring. EMDR, or eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing, is a PTSD treatment that has grown in popularity in recent years. It involves guiding patients through bilateral stimulation, which they achieve by moving their eyes from side to side, for instance, or holding buzzers that send alternating pulses to the left and right hands. This is meant to ground them in the present as they recall traumas from their past.

The World Health Organization, the American Psychological Association and other similar bodies recommend EMDR as a treatment for PTSD, but controversy remains over how it stacks up against other forms of treatment and how effective it actually is, according to聽.

The treatment is flexible in length and can have an impact on PTSD symptoms after only a handful of sessions. This allows it to fit into FSU鈥檚 counselling services model, which generally aims for a student鈥檚 treatment to last no more than one semester. That limit used to mean that students with trauma were referred to off-campus therapists for longer-term treatment. But now, in many cases, they can find relief from their sessions at the college counselling centre within the allotted time frame.

The treatment is in high demand, according to FSU counsellor Julia Coelho, and many students are already aware of EMDR before they show up for their first appointment.

鈥淚鈥檝e been here going on six years, and we have more students than ever who are requesting EMDR. They know what it is, they maybe heard someone talking about it and they鈥檙e calling us,鈥 said Ms Coelho. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really amazing when clients come and they鈥檙e ready to do the work.鈥

Viviana Urdaneta, chief of clinical affairs for the EMDR International Association and a former college clinician, said that many colleges聽had begun offering the treatment in recent years. Students liked it not only because it relieved PTSD symptoms relatively quickly, but also because it聽did not require them to do additional outside work, she noted.

鈥淭here is no homework, and that was a big draw for university students,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e want you to think about the trauma when you鈥檙e with me in the office, but when you鈥檙e not in sessions, your only job is to notice if there are changes. You don鈥檛 actually have to be doing journalling or a bunch of things.鈥

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Beyond the counselling session

Offering treatments for trauma isn鈥檛 the only way counselling centres have adapted to the changing mental health landscape on campus. Trauma-informed care, a framework for providing a safe environment to people who have had traumatic experiences, dictates other elements of the counselling process, from the initial consultation to the layout of a centre's waiting room.

Western Carolina University鈥檚 Counseling and Psychological Services, which for the past several years has seen higher rates of students reporting trauma than the average college counselling centre, focuses on trauma awareness in its operations. Giving clients choices is an important element of trauma-informed care, since many traumatic events involve the victim feeling powerless, said Kim Gorman, associate vice chancellor for health and wellness. That means WCU鈥檚 counselling services offer a range of options, including a 鈥渕enu鈥 of treatment plans, the choice of virtual or in-person appointments, and even the ability to complete the intake form on paper or a tablet.

That element of choice, she said, 鈥渋s one of those things we really thought deeply about聽鈥 how can we implement that on all levels?鈥

WCU also reworked the lobby area of the counselling centre to remove a couch, which students sometimes avoided sitting on out of fear that they could be triggered by someone sitting close to them, Ms Gorman said.

Ms Coelho, of FSU, said that some principles of trauma-informed care come up in clinical sessions with virtually all students, such as respecting boundaries about what they may or may not want to share from their pasts.

鈥淔orcing someone before they鈥檙e ready to talk about a traumatic experience is traumatic,鈥 she said.

Trauma-informed care can reach beyond the counselling centre, as well; the pandemic drew attention to the concept of聽, which calls upon professors to recognise that their students聽might have past traumas that affect their ability to succeed in class and to respond compassionately.

At WCU, clinicians from counselling services have worked with the campus鈥檚 recreation centre to offer trauma-informed yoga classes, which, according to a class description, work 鈥渢o create a safer, supportive space in which students can learn emotional regulation skills through increased body awareness鈥. Another clinician is currently training to offer trauma-informed weight lifting.

College can be a fraught, stress-inducing time for many students learning to navigate a new environment and routine. But for those who have experienced trauma at home, it聽might be the first time they聽have been removed from that environment聽鈥 which can be a major boon for the healing process.

鈥淔rom a client鈥檚 side of things, coming into a centre, disclosing information that you鈥檝e never shared with anyone and then hearing, 鈥榌You] could be noticing relief in some of your聽symptoms in a few weeks,鈥 instead of 鈥榌You] have to brace myself for years and years of therapy鈥 is empowering our students and helping them to feel better sooner,鈥 Ms Coelho said.

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