A national survey has confirmed what college counselors in the Philadelphia region have already noted on their own campuses with dismay: Students are rating their emotional health at all-time lows.
Only 51.9 percent of respondents judged their emotional health above average, according to a survey of 201,000 freshmen at 279 colleges and universities conducted in the fall by the University of California at Los Angeles.
That was the smallest percentage since researchers began asking the question in 1985. From 2009 to 2010, the share of freshmen reporting above-average emotional health dropped 3.4 percentage points.
At several colleges in the Philadelphia area, administrators say that the demand for mental-health services has been growing for some time, but that there was a noticeable uptick this academic year. Many have responded by increasing counseling staffs, among other measures.