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Yale lawsuit signals US struggles on mental health exclusions

In handling widespread and complicated problems for academia, especially after Covid, Ivy League institution moves from denial to attempts at finding compromise

十二月 20, 2022
A snow covered sculpture is seen in Greenwich, Connecticut to illustrate Yale lawsuit signals US struggles on mental health exclusions
Source: Getty

Yale University is seeking compromise in a lawsuit alleging mistreatment of students with mental health issues, aiming to moderate what experts regard as a historically hard stance amid an increasingly complicated set of choices for US higher education.

The lawsuit,??by current and former Yale students, contends that the Ivy League institution has routinely discriminated against students with mental health challenges by pushing them to withdraw and then hindering their return.

Yale has put forth a series of responses in recent weeks,??with all applicable laws and regulations,??to be even more responsive and – most recently – winning a postponement of the legal process?.

The dispute comes at a time when US higher education is consumed by high rates of student mental health challenges, apparently exacerbated by pandemic-related restrictions on personal interactions.

Nearly half of all US college students are understood to be suffering from some form of anxiety and depression, said one expert, Miriam Heyman, a senior research associate at the Lurie Institute for Disability Policy at Brandeis University.

“We’re also seeing, across the board, that campuses haven’t figured out how to support their students,” she said. “And as a default, they’re resorting to these exclusionary policies to get the students home.”

The problem is likely worse at elite and high-pressure campuses such as Yale, said Dr Heyman,??that looked at the eight Ivy League institutions and called them all failures in terms of their policies for imposing leaves of absence on students with mental illness.

Measured against its peer institutions, Dr Heyman said, “I don’t think that Yale is an outlier.”

In fact, said another expert, Victor Schwartz, the senior associate dean for wellness and student life at the City University of New York, right-sizing mental health care is a difficult topic across US higher education – with great levels of nuance and variation.

Yale does have “a very longstanding traditional hardcore stance on leaves of absence that, at this point, probably puts it somewhere outside the mainstream”, Dr Schwartz said. At the same time, “they’re providing a tonne of services to a lot of students”, he said. “We don’t hear about all the situations that get resolved well and to everybody’s satisfaction – we hear about the cases that are problematic or resulted in conflict.”

The lawsuit against Yale has three named plaintiffs, including Rachael Shaw-Rosenbaum, a fresher who??after worrying about the possibility of being forced to withdraw from Yale because of her mental health challenges.

Another is Hannah Neves, an undergraduate from Brazil who was hospitalised after a suicide attempt in 2020 and said that three Yale administrators visited her urging her to withdraw from the university, which under federal law would require her to leave the US within 15 days.

There’s a combination of reasons why some situations might turn out badly, Dr Schwartz said, including the complications of bureaucracies, and variations in how individual staff handle particular cases.

“Sometimes it’s not the policies that are problematic; certain people are just more hard-line than others,” he said.

paul.basken@timeshighereducation.com

If you’re having suicidal thoughts or feel you need to talk to someone, a free helpline is available around the clock in the UK on 116123, or you can email?jo@samaritans.org. In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is?1-800-273-8255. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other international suicide helplines can be found at?.

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Reader's comments (2)

This is such a sad thing to think about. Yale is already a very elitist school so to hear it mistreats their mentally ill students is disgusting to read about, but not surprising.
Unfortunately, for some cases, mental health is not managed to the extend that these students can pursue a degree programme. Pursuing a degree programme includes some reasonable and expected level of stress; if a person does not have their mental health issue managed to cope with this, no amount of support from any university will be sufficient. It is not reasonable to expect any university to provide support to the extent of compromising educational standards just because a student has a mental illness. Sometimes, unfortunate as it is, the student is not ready to cope with the demands of the degree programme because their mental health is not managed for them to do so. It is not reasonable to argue that just because a person has mental illness, then any institution (be it educational or a private company) has to do *anything* and *everything* just to accommodate that (e.g., removing and adjusting so that there are no or little stress expected for an undergraduate). Studying and learning something new *is* stressful and it is reasonable to expect that it *is* stressful. No amount of adjustment should and would remove that.
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