It is also true that we are not mind-readers and sometimes don't pick up the severity of someone's situation when he or she calls up to make an appointment. We are always trying to find the right balance of inviting people to come in for care and letting them define the urgency of the visit, i.e., by not asking too many questions that feel intrusive when someone calls to make an appointment.
It is important for students to know that we have further increased our urgent care/walk-in hours to four hours a day on Monday through Friday. There are urgent care hours with staff available from 9:30 to 10:30, 12:30 to 1:30, 3:30 to 4:30 and 5 to 6 Monday through Friday, and there is a Mental Health Clinician on call on evenings and weekends available to come in and speak with students on-site or speak on the phone with students who call in with questions or concerns.
We have instituted a new system of liaisons to each of the Houses and the Freshman Dean's Office so that College officers will have a personal relationship with our staff. We are always available for consultation to tutors and proctors.
We also meet with and coordinate care with the Bureau of Study Council, as many students access both of our systems. We are increasing our training hours for tutors and proctors during the year and are strongly committed to doing whatever we can to prevent suicide.
The Mental Health Service is a dedicated group of clinicians who want to do whatever we can to help the students at Harvard deal with the myriad stresses and demands that they face in this very intense environment. We hope that ordinary people will come to us for help with their problems and concerns because we are all vulnerable, and relationships and support are the best ways to deal with life's stresses and uncertainties.
Richard Kadison
April 6, 1999
The writer is the chief of Mental Health Services at UHS.
Read more in Opinion
Justice ServedRecommended Articles
-
Mental Health Now Campus ConcernThis is the first part in a two-part series concerning the challenges students face in dealing with various forms of
-
Report Finds Mental Health Services LackingMental health services at Harvard are understaffed and inefficiently coordinated--though improving--according to a report to be released today by a
-
Harvard Launches Health InitiativeHarvard wants you to know that it cares. In the wake of student complaints about the University's mental health resources,
-
You're Not Crazy, You're Just at HarvardAt the same time as suicide and depression rates for teenagers have increased drastically so too have the rates for
-
Mental Health Needs AttentionH arvard can be a pretty stressful and depressing place, especially if you have nowhere to turn. A recent article
-
Asking for Help at HarvardLiving in a community that has endured two apparent suicides over the past year and a half, I have at