Doctoral students do not suffer significantly worse levels of mental well-being after starting their PhDs, according to a study that challenges the growing consensus about the 鈥渕ental health crisis鈥 in postgraduate education.
Although聽the longitudinal study of almost 6,000 students in New Zealand found that those who began a PhD had lower mental well-being than graduates who went straight into work, they experienced only an 鈥渆xtremely small鈥 decline in happiness levels compared with three years earlier.
The study, published on the PysArXiv聽聽platform, says that the unhappiness levels reported by PhD students are 鈥渟maller than one might expect based on previous empirical research鈥, concluding that 鈥減oor mental health is not an inevitable consequence of graduate study鈥.
The results diverge from recent international studies that have sounded the alarm about apparently high levels of anxiety, stress and psychiatric problems among postgraduates. According to a 2017 paper聽that聽tracked聽Belgian students, PhD candidates were 2.4 times more likely to develop mental health problems than degree holders in the general population, while a 2019聽survey聽of more than 6,000 PhD students by聽Nature聽found 36 per cent had sought help for anxiety or depression.
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In 2018, a聽聽of mainly US-based doctoral students found they were six times more likely to suffer severe anxiety or depression than the general population, concluding that there was a 鈥渕ental health crisis in graduate education鈥.
New Zealand鈥檚 doctoral education system could explain why the study鈥檚 findings are different to the bleaker results from the US, where doctoral studies often last much longer than elsewhere, the paper suggests.
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However, Damian Scarf, one of the study鈥檚 co-authors and a lecturer in psychology at the University of Otago, said that it did not explain why analyses of European doctoral students reached such different conclusions.
鈥淸PhD] programmes in the UK and Europe are similar to if not the same as those in New Zealand,鈥 Dr Scarf told聽探花视频, although he admitted that his country鈥檚 higher completion rates could account for some of the difference. 鈥淭his could be important 鈥 not completing a PhD or having the PhD drag on would no doubt have a negative effect on mental health,鈥 he said.
Another explanation is that the study used a survey tool 鈥 the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale 鈥 which took a 鈥渕ore positive approach to assessing mental health鈥 compared with other studies聽that used a 鈥渄eficit lens鈥 by measuring anxiety, depression and psychological distress, says the paper, described as the first longitudinal study of mental health in PhD students.
It also argues that the glut of gloomy studies on PhD welfare could itself contribute to the problem.
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鈥淢aking it sound like mental health problems are ubiquitous among graduate students makes it sound normative, and this could have several downsides,鈥 Dr Scarf told聽THE, adding that the 鈥渓ack of balance in the discussion is unhelpful and maybe even harmful鈥.
鈥淰iewing poor mental health during graduate study as normative will likely decrease help-seeking behaviour because students view it as an unavoidable product of graduate education,鈥 continued Dr Scarf.
鈥淚f it sounds like poor mental health is unique to graduate study, it might make students feel more isolated, [particularly if they] think that their friends and family聽who聽are not in graduate study may not understand their feelings.鈥
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