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Students anxious over Toronto mental health tactics

University tries to allay fears that reporting mental health issues could result in students being barred from campus

Published on
April 20, 2021
Last updated
April 20, 2021
University of Toronto, mental health policies

The University of Toronto is trying to damp down fears that a policy intended to help its students recover from mental illness is instead aimed at forcing them from campus.

The 2018 policy allows the university to place students on leave if they have serious mental health problems, and it鈥檚 raising concern at a moment when the pandemic has聽increased stress levels across academia.

Nearly half of Toronto鈥檚 students have a negative impression of the policy, according to聽聽reported by the University of Toronto Students鈥 Union.

About half of the survey鈥檚 135 respondents also said the possibility of being forced out of university made them less likely to voluntarily report mental health concerns to the institution.

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The university, however, is calling such worries unfounded, saying the policy has rarely been used and is designed to help students return to their classes rather than kick them out.

鈥淲e are working to counter the perception that seeking mental health supports will somehow trigger the mandated leave process,鈥 Toronto said in response to the student fears. 鈥淭his is simply not the case.鈥

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Even before Covid, mental health聽was a major issue in college settings. The age group of 15 to 24 is known as the most likely to experience mental illness, according to the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto. In Canada鈥檚 version of the 2019 National College Health Assessment,聽聽of the nation鈥檚 post-secondary students reported feeling 鈥渕ore than average鈥 or 鈥渢remendous鈥 stress.

Various expert assessments have suggested a worsening of stress during the pandemic as students deal with disruptions in routines and the loss of access to friends and other support. That same remote environment, however, makes statistics elusive.

鈥淭he data is fuzzy,鈥 said Kevin Kee, dean of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Ottawa, and chair of that university鈥檚 president鈥檚 advisory committee on mental health and wellness. But, he said, 鈥渢here are lots of data points to suggest a rise in anxiety and concern; nobody should be surprised by that鈥.

Toronto鈥檚 policy lets institutional leaders place students on leave if their mental health condition poses a threat to themselves or others or prevents them from pursuing their educational work.

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But the university said it used that power just eight times during the 2018-19 academic year and once in 2019-20, out of a student population of more than 90,000. 鈥淚n many of the cases, the students have returned to the classroom or are in the process of doing so,鈥 the university said.

Toronto is facing additional scepticism, however, from high-profile cases such as a student who reportedly came to its health and counselling centre in 2019 describing suicidal feelings and聽聽and taken to a hospital. There, a psychiatrist said she needed only to be sent home with plans for follow-up visits.

The government-founded Mental Health Commission of Canada issued in October what it called the 鈥渇irst of its kind in the world鈥澛犅爁or post-secondary institutions to promote positive mental health among their students.

Ed Mantler, the commission鈥檚 vice-president for programmes and priorities, who helped draft the guidelines, said the commission acted in part because of the diversity of approaches at Canadian universities.

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Professor Kee said he couldn鈥檛 comment on Toronto鈥檚 practice, but said it appeared to be 鈥渁 well-intentioned policy that鈥檚 not punitive鈥, even if some students felt otherwise.

鈥淭his is a challenge we face on every campus,鈥 Professor Kee said.

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paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

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