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A campus organization is spearheading a campaign to improve coordination between different mental health and suicide awareness groups at UCLA.
The Green Ribbon Club hosted a Mental Health Leadership Conference on Apr. 17 to foster collaboration between campus mental health organizations. Attendees for the conference included representatives from the Graduate Student Resource Center, the Semel Institute for Neuroscience, the Arthur Ashe Student Health and Wellness Center, and several student groups. The ultimate aim of the club, which was founded in October by Brian McInerney, a graduate student in public health, is to destigmatize mental health nationwide to lower suicide rates in the U.S.
Several members of the group said they think mental health organizations on campus have historically struggled to collaborate in improving mental health awareness.
Emily Cornell, a graduate student in public health, said she noticed the many mental health awareness groups on campus did not coordinate their campaigns.
“There were many people on campus talking about mental health issues [who] were willing to take action to make a change, but they had trouble moving forward,” she said. “These people recognized the importance of mental health initiatives, but they were not working together.”
McInerney said he thinks many individuals rally around mental health issues but often do not take any tangible action.
“No matter how much money you spend on these different organizations, there is a cost if groups on campus are not united,” he said.
McInerney added he thinks it is important for groups to openly communicate about mental health to help prevent suicide.
“Many people think that suicide is an individual issue, but that is proven false,” he said. “Research shows that if someone commits suicide, those close to them are more likely to commit suicide.”
Lamar Hayes, a graduate student in public health and a member of the Green Ribbon Club, said his struggles with mental health stemmed from difficult experiences he went through growing up.
“There were events that happened … that had a lasting impact on my life and the way I felt about myself,” Hayes said. “A little bit later in life, I had a panic attack, something I had never experienced before. There is a difference in reading about these things and actually experiencing [them].”
Hayes said he does not think mental health and suicide are topics that should be swept under the rug and hopes to help individuals become comfortable with discussing these issues openly.
“[Mental health] is a topic [for which] you can’t just show up places and say, ‘Hey! I want to talk about this.’ There is no green pass,” Hayes said. “It takes destigmatizing, so our goal is to reach people communicatively in their own comfort zone.”
McInerney said he thinks UCLA has been extremely helpful when it comes to providing support and resources for students who struggle with mental health, but students still do not openly discuss mental health. He added he thinks the campus needs a space where students can be open about what they are going through.
“[The club tries] to create an environment where one expressing his or her mental health problems is not alienating,” McInerney said. It’s a fair time [when] … everyone can feel free to express themselves.”
Originally published at www.dailybruin.com.
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The Hidden Stress of RAs in the Student Mental Health Crisis