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Understanding university student priorities for mental health and well-being support: a mixed-methods exploration using the person-based approach

Understanding university student priorities for mental health and well-being support: a mixed-methods exploration using the person-based approach
Understanding university student priorities for mental health and well-being support: a mixed-methods exploration using the person-based approach
Poor student well-being at UK universities is overstretching institutional support services, highlighting a need for effective new resources. Despite extensive literature on mental health and well-being interventions, students’ engagement with support remains unexplored. The study aimed to understand students’ experience of engagement with well-being support, identify their well-being needs and form concrete recommendations for future intervention design and delivery. The Person-Based Approach to intervention design was followed to centralise users’ experience, in turn maximising acceptability and effectiveness of resources. An online survey (N = 52) was followed by three focus groups (N = 14). Survey data were analysed descriptively, and reflexive thematic analysis was performed on qualitative data. Mixed-methods data integration produced four key student priorities for well-being resources – ease of access, inclusive and preventative approach, sense of community and a safe space, and applying skills to real-life contexts. Five actionable guiding principles for intervention design were produced through consultation with expert stakeholders. This work helps understand why and how students engage with support at university. The resulting recommendations can inform future intervention development, leading to more acceptable, engaging and effective student well-being resources.
intervention development, mental health, person-based approach, university students, well-being
1532-3005
776-789
Remskar, Masha
a3d50511-a419-4492-b173-3b32866a0d7f
Atkinson, Melissa
3256faa4-7b30-4a5c-b929-92a245ae4747
Marks, Elizabeth
ee1056b7-3777-47df-8ced-1dd4789aba28
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81
Remskar, Masha
a3d50511-a419-4492-b173-3b32866a0d7f
Atkinson, Melissa
3256faa4-7b30-4a5c-b929-92a245ae4747
Marks, Elizabeth
ee1056b7-3777-47df-8ced-1dd4789aba28
Ainsworth, Ben
b02d78c3-aa8b-462d-a534-31f1bf164f81

Remskar, Masha, Atkinson, Melissa, Marks, Elizabeth and Ainsworth, Ben (2022) Understanding university student priorities for mental health and well-being support: a mixed-methods exploration using the person-based approach. Stress and Health, 38 (4), 776-789. (doi:10.1002/smi.3133).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Poor student well-being at UK universities is overstretching institutional support services, highlighting a need for effective new resources. Despite extensive literature on mental health and well-being interventions, students’ engagement with support remains unexplored. The study aimed to understand students’ experience of engagement with well-being support, identify their well-being needs and form concrete recommendations for future intervention design and delivery. The Person-Based Approach to intervention design was followed to centralise users’ experience, in turn maximising acceptability and effectiveness of resources. An online survey (N = 52) was followed by three focus groups (N = 14). Survey data were analysed descriptively, and reflexive thematic analysis was performed on qualitative data. Mixed-methods data integration produced four key student priorities for well-being resources – ease of access, inclusive and preventative approach, sense of community and a safe space, and applying skills to real-life contexts. Five actionable guiding principles for intervention design were produced through consultation with expert stakeholders. This work helps understand why and how students engage with support at university. The resulting recommendations can inform future intervention development, leading to more acceptable, engaging and effective student well-being resources.

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Accepted/In Press date: 31 January 2022
Published date: October 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: Authors thank the University of Bath Student Services (SS) for their help with the study, particularly Mr Anthony Payne (AP) and Mr Andrew Ayers (AA) for consulting as stakeholders. Further thanks go to Dr Nicola Taylor (NT) for the external stakeholder consultation. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Stress and Health published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Keywords: intervention development, mental health, person-based approach, university students, well-being

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470455
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470455
ISSN: 1532-3005
PURE UUID: a022bd26-98aa-4391-8b25-e325d8eccd4a
ORCID for Ben Ainsworth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5098-1092

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Date deposited: 11 Oct 2022 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:19

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Contributors

Author: Masha Remskar
Author: Melissa Atkinson
Author: Elizabeth Marks
Author: Ben Ainsworth ORCID iD

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