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UPDATE:
NAMI-Fairfield and Fairfield University School of Nursing, including the Counseling Services Center and the Wellness & Prevention Center, bring NAMI affiliate to Fairfield University
First student meeting planned for Fall, 2007!
College transition is sometimes referred to as the "age of depression." This four year period is a very vulnerable time in the life of a college student. This transition is marked by changes in living environments, social support systems , academic demands, new found freedom, and partying with dangerous increased alcohol consumption. In addition, lack of sleep and poor eating habits contribute to the development of severe chronic stress, which can lead to depression, ADD. anxiety, eating disorders, self injury, obsessive-compulsive disorder,bipolar disorder and substance abuse. It is also important to note that in today's society, more and more college students enter school with a mental illness history and are taking psychiatric medications. With these facts in place, I believe that there is a real urgency for education and significant change in campus attitudes about mental illness. Over the past 20 years, college and university counseling centers have evolved into a community mental health system for college students. Unfortunately, who are in need of mental health services encounter substandard counseling resources on their college or university campus. NAMI-The National Alliance on Mental Illness continues to acknowledge and address the needs of these students by supporting the creation of affiliates at colleges campuses across the country. This Campus Affiliate Initiative is designed to reach out to college students. In partnership with the NAMI state organizations and local affiliates, campus affiliates are working to provide educational resources that inform students about mental illness and prevent stigma. A NAMI-on-Campus Affiliate is student led and is designed to spread mental health awareness, education and advocacy in their collegiate community. Through their work, these affiliates will supplement and enhance existing support and counseling services on campus. Our NAMI-Fairfield affiliate in partnership with the Fairfield University School of Nursing, the campus Counseling Services Center and The Wellness and Prevention Center are working to bring a NAMI Affiliate to Fairfield University. This has been a work in progress and the first student organizational meeting is planned for this Fall semester.
written by a Fairfield University Graduate
here's a great link to NAMI's "Online College Fair":
http://www.revolutionhealth.com/healthfair/?msc=A62825
Congratulations to Fairfield University and its School of Nursing!
"NAMI on Campus"
This will be the first established NAMI on Campus Affiliate in CT
Fall 2006 will be the development stage, as soon as the students return to classes.
Meetings will begin on campus beginning during the Spring semester ,2007.
Details regarding this new affiliate will be provided here as they become available.
Administrators seek to expand mental health support, awareness at FU
When it's not just another case of the Mondays...
Media Credit: Laura Zakreski
Feeling a little more than just under the weather?: NAMI on Campus will provide support and awareness services to students struggling with mental illnesses.
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You are a senior in college, and all of a sudden a nervous breakdown takes you by surprise. What do you do? Where do you go for help?
Like many universities, Fairfield has been working to provide services for such students.
"The academic and social stresses of college are more intense than in high school," said Elise Harrison, assistant director of Fairfield University's Counseling Services. "These stresses occur when a student leaves the support and guidance of parents. They are more likely to experiment with drugs during college. Competition in college tends to increase. There is less structure. Often, students are sleep deprived and may not be eating in healthy ways."
Efforts are being made by Fairfield University's School of Nursing and the Counseling Services to bring the National Alliance on Mental Illness to campus. NAMI on Campus affiliates are student-run and student-based organizations that provide mental health support, education and advocacy in a university or college setting.
With the leadership of college students, the group is designed to engage and educate campus communities about an issue that warrants serious attention: mental illness. NAMI on Campus's main mission is to educate, provide information and resources, promote early detection and intervention, and combat the stigma regarding mental illnesses. It also serves to end the seclusion of mentally ill students, promote existing mental health services and advocate for enhanced support and counseling services on campus.
"The purpose of NAMI on Campus is to meet the needs of the students at a vulnerable time in their lives, break the stigma against mental illnesses and to support and educate students on the Fairfield University campus," said Joyce Shea, adjunct professor in the School of Nursing. "However, the specific goals are up to the students."
The most common problems faced by college students are depression, anxiety, substance abuse, eating disorders, attention deficit disorder and bipolar disorder.
"Lack of sleep can be a precipitating factor in the development of anxiety, depression and bipolar disorder," Shea said. "Homesickness and social pressures may contribute to low self-esteem and feelings of loneliness."
Since most mental illnesses are caused by chemical imbalances or other physiological causes, mental illnesses should be treated like any other disease.
"Research shows that mental illnesses are linked to chemical imbalances or other functional problems that interfere with the brain's normal processes. These are real diseases," said Betsy-Anne Entwisle, president of NAMI-Fairfield.
NAMI National is the nation's largest grassroots health organization dedicated to improving the lives of people with serious mental illnesses and their families. NAMI was founded in 1979, and now has more than 220,000 individual members working through more than 1,000 local and state affiliates. NAMI affiliates provide support and education to consumers, or the individuals with the brain disorders, family members, professionals and the public through different educational programs.
Insurance reform, advocacy for better services, treatment and protection of rights, homelessness and housing, children and aging adult issues, Medicaid and Medicare funding, stigma and discrimination, employment and decriminalization are also addressed.
There will be an open meeting after spring vacation for those interested in beginning NAMI on Campus here at Fairfield University. Five students are needed to sign a charter to become an official group. The goal is to have NAMI on Campus fully operational by next fall.
Mental illnesses are a serious issue and need to be treated like any other illness, according to Jeanne DiMuzio, director of Wellness and Prevention.
"Mental health needs to be embraced as any other illness," she said. "If a person has diabetes they take meds, change their diet, exercise more and seek expert consultation to manage their illness. The same is true of mental illness. If a brain disorder is diagnosed, they make take meds, change their lifestyle, and seek expert consultation so that they can move forward."
In Our Own Voice: Living with Mental Illness
A unique presentation that offers insight into the hope and recovery that is now possible for people with severe mental illness – presented by people who have been there.
Join us!
Thursday, November 30, 2006
6:30 p.m. reception
7:00 p.m. presentation
School of Nursing Auditorium
(SON 204)
Sponsored by Fairfield University School of Nursing
For More Information,Contact:
Joyce Shea, DNSc, APRN, BC at
(203) 254-4000 ext. 2575 or email
jshea@mail.fairfield.edu
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