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More than ‘resilience’: a scoping review of institutional and societal risk and protective factors for UK undergraduate mental ill-health

More than ‘resilience’: a scoping review of institutional and societal risk and protective factors for UK undergraduate mental ill-health
More than ‘resilience’: a scoping review of institutional and societal risk and protective factors for UK undergraduate mental ill-health
Poor mental health among undergraduate students is often addressed through interventions which aim to improve resilience, mindfulness or similar qualities. This shifts the responsibility of improving student mental health onto students themselves and obscures the effect of institutions and societies. This scoping review aimed to identify what is known and what gaps exist in the literature about institutional and societal risk and protective factors for UK undergraduate student mental ill-health. Eleven databases, Google and reference lists were searched for journal articles and grey literature published between 2005 and 2024, which examined institutional or societal risk or protective factors for UK undergraduate student mental ill-health. Forty-four publications met the inclusion criteria for the review. Institutional factors identified related to studying, getting support, university life and interventions. Societal factors identified related to state finance and immigration systems, travel and transport, and the COVID pandemic. These factors are not culturally specific to the UK but rather represent issues of concern for university policymakers and practitioners internationally. This review highlights the importance of student-centred policies, particularly for financial and study-related factors, and providing training for university staff on undergraduate mental health and changes they can make to teaching, support services and the campus environment for students generally and sub-groups of students with particular needs. Potentially fruitful avenues of further research for improving undergraduate student mental health include the impact of campus culture, specific university policies, university facilities and built environments, specific national/regional policies and laws, structural inequalities, cultural norms and local environments or communities.
higher education, institution, mental health, society, undergraduate
1052-9284
Holloway, Marion
0c9e4ca9-5529-4dee-b96f-9ae9028c5fba
Litsou, Katerina
ec757999-5c4d-4dfa-a2b0-a51d83f0db97
Milnes, Kate
0ebf487d-c679-4873-95a2-6b074721da8d
Turner-Moore, Rhys
58d20d55-2d33-4722-8cd0-54c3d3f2c8ed
Holloway, Marion
0c9e4ca9-5529-4dee-b96f-9ae9028c5fba
Litsou, Katerina
ec757999-5c4d-4dfa-a2b0-a51d83f0db97
Milnes, Kate
0ebf487d-c679-4873-95a2-6b074721da8d
Turner-Moore, Rhys
58d20d55-2d33-4722-8cd0-54c3d3f2c8ed

Holloway, Marion, Litsou, Katerina, Milnes, Kate and Turner-Moore, Rhys (2025) More than ‘resilience’: a scoping review of institutional and societal risk and protective factors for UK undergraduate mental ill-health. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 35 (6), [e70182]. (doi:10.1002/casp.70182).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Poor mental health among undergraduate students is often addressed through interventions which aim to improve resilience, mindfulness or similar qualities. This shifts the responsibility of improving student mental health onto students themselves and obscures the effect of institutions and societies. This scoping review aimed to identify what is known and what gaps exist in the literature about institutional and societal risk and protective factors for UK undergraduate student mental ill-health. Eleven databases, Google and reference lists were searched for journal articles and grey literature published between 2005 and 2024, which examined institutional or societal risk or protective factors for UK undergraduate student mental ill-health. Forty-four publications met the inclusion criteria for the review. Institutional factors identified related to studying, getting support, university life and interventions. Societal factors identified related to state finance and immigration systems, travel and transport, and the COVID pandemic. These factors are not culturally specific to the UK but rather represent issues of concern for university policymakers and practitioners internationally. This review highlights the importance of student-centred policies, particularly for financial and study-related factors, and providing training for university staff on undergraduate mental health and changes they can make to teaching, support services and the campus environment for students generally and sub-groups of students with particular needs. Potentially fruitful avenues of further research for improving undergraduate student mental health include the impact of campus culture, specific university policies, university facilities and built environments, specific national/regional policies and laws, structural inequalities, cultural norms and local environments or communities.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 17 September 2025
Published date: 28 September 2025
Keywords: higher education, institution, mental health, society, undergraduate

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506352
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506352
ISSN: 1052-9284
PURE UUID: 9c81f263-4180-43de-928e-fb87796809f3
ORCID for Katerina Litsou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1632-8946

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 04 Nov 2025 18:18
Last modified: 05 Nov 2025 02:55

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Contributors

Author: Marion Holloway
Author: Katerina Litsou ORCID iD
Author: Kate Milnes
Author: Rhys Turner-Moore

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