Volunteers from Semiahmoo Secondary school are pictured on the school’s Mental Health Day, which students and counsellors brought back after a pandemic-related hiatus. (Contributed photo)

Volunteers from Semiahmoo Secondary school are pictured on the school’s Mental Health Day, which students and counsellors brought back after a pandemic-related hiatus. (Contributed photo)

‘Under high pressure’: B.C. students organize Mental Health Day

Grade 12 students want to see mental health services become more accessible

A group of Semiahmoo Secondary students from South Surrey have brought back Mental Health Day to their school, breathing new life into an event that had been on hold since the start of the pandemic.

Working together with school counsellors, six students organized this year’s event, which took place Tuesday, Feb. 28 in the library during the lunch hour. The entire school was invited to participate.

Displayed throughout the room were informative posters. There were areas designated for participants to de-stress by playing games or painting. Counsellors and non-profit organizations shared techniques to handle stress and anxiety, including breathing exercises and more.

“Mental (illness) is a very relevant and ongoing issue that goes under-addressed in multiple settings, including schools where most of us spend (a lot) of time throughout the week,” said Catherine Jiang, a Grade 12 student at Semiahmoo who co-organized the event.

In order to make the day a reality, the students researched youth mental health to find ways to “embody different ways of practicing healthy self-care practices and also just shining a light on the necessity of taking care of your well-being.”

Bringing Mental Health Day back to the school was important for Jiang and her team, who said resources for people their age are not easy to access. Having school counsellors is great, she added, but enhancing services could benefit more students.

“Before diving into this project, I didn’t really have too much contact with mental health (services) because it isn’t something that we really bring up often.

“Students are under high pressure, whether that’s academically or trying to juggle school, social and family life. I think that’s not spoken (about) enough.”

The event drew large numbers of students, with the library “packed” for most of the event.

Early start crucial

“When schools do days, like Mental Health Day, that’s great, but it’s not sustainable,” said Andrew Baxter, a registered social worker who works with the province’s educators through the University of British Columbia’s faculty of education mental health institute.

“How do we have this sustained in the school community or school culture? The way to do that is to change school classroom practices. Our belief is that if you put this right next to math, if you build this into curriculum… then that really reduces the stigma… you open pathways to care, you improve help-seeking and it normalizes it for youth.”

Onset of about 70 per cent of mental illnesses happens between the ages of 12 and 25, but education about mental health should begin earlier than that, Baxter added. He has trained educators in most school districts in B.C. to recognize when students may be struggling and refer them to services that can provide appropriate next steps for that student.

Some students require more community support for the issues they face, while others need psychiatric care or “a higher level of service,” Baxter said, adding that differentiating between the two is the job of trained professionals and should not be put on educators.

How the pandemic has affected youths’ mental health is still not completely known, Baxter said.

“Some of the stigma has, thankfully, diminished. People are talking about (mental health) a lot more, so the symptoms of disorders have gone way up, we know that. But there is a big difference between reported symptoms and actual disorders. It’s probably a good thing that students are reporting to us that they’re stressed out and they’re experiencing big stressors in their life. That’s reduced stigma and that’s a positive.”

More accessibility the goal

While Jiang and the other Grade 12 students who organized this year’s event are expecting to graduate soon, she hopes that the event will continue and that services for youth will become more accessible as years go on.

Mental health struggles can be hard for young people to recognize, Jiang said, because symptoms of stress or anxiety are so common amongst her peers that they may not even realize they could benefit from support.

Jiang hopes the school implements “more concrete ways for students to give feedback to administration and also to get involved in the subject of mental health” because it is constantly evolving and students should have more of a voice in the matter, she said.

“The youth are asking for this, they are requesting more knowledge on this,” Baxter noted.

Schools in the province are progressing, he maintained, but improvements and enhancements are undoubtedly needed.

“We need an upstream approach and a bit of an on-scene approach, so we need more counsellors and we need more service providers and school’s a logical place for that to be delivered because they youth are there,” Baxter said.

Last month, Lizanne Foster, first vice president of the Surrey Teachers Association told Black Press Media that some elementary schools in the Surrey school district only operate with one counsellor a week because of staff shortages.

“So you’ve got a kid in distress on a Monday morning and there is no help until the counsellor comes, maybe on Thursday or Friday. Then when the counsellor comes on the one day, we have (a backlog),” Foster said.

READ MORE: Discussions about safety for students divides school community in Surrey school district


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