Book contents
- Improving University Mental Health
- Improving University Mental Health
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements and Thanks to Contributors
- Chapter 1 Introducing This Handbook
- Chapter 2 Building a New Sense of Belonging
- Chapter 3 The Transition to University for New Students with Pre-Existing Mental Conditions
- Chapter 4 The Roles of Parents and Carers
- Chapter 5 Healthy Bodies, Body Image Concerns, Eating Disorders
- Chapter 6 Alcohol
- Chapter 7 Substance Misuse
- Chapter 8 Social (and Anti-social) Media
- Chapter 9 Finance and Mental Health
- Chapter 10 Neurodiversity
- Chapter 11 Ethnically Diverse University Communities
- Chapter 12 Sexual Behaviour and Gender Identity in Universities
- Chapter 13 The Mental Health of Teaching and Academic Staff
- Chapter 14 An Overview of Mental Disorders in Students and Staff
- Chapter 15 ‘Psychotic’ Disorders
- Chapter 16 Mood Disorders
- Chapter 17 Suicide at University
- Chapter 18 Mental Health Services on Campus and in the NHS
- Chapter 19 Students of the Professions and ‘Fitness to Practise’ Issues
- Chapter 20 Summing It All Up
- Index
- References
Chapter 19 - Students of the Professions and ‘Fitness to Practise’ Issues
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 February 2024
- Improving University Mental Health
- Improving University Mental Health
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements and Thanks to Contributors
- Chapter 1 Introducing This Handbook
- Chapter 2 Building a New Sense of Belonging
- Chapter 3 The Transition to University for New Students with Pre-Existing Mental Conditions
- Chapter 4 The Roles of Parents and Carers
- Chapter 5 Healthy Bodies, Body Image Concerns, Eating Disorders
- Chapter 6 Alcohol
- Chapter 7 Substance Misuse
- Chapter 8 Social (and Anti-social) Media
- Chapter 9 Finance and Mental Health
- Chapter 10 Neurodiversity
- Chapter 11 Ethnically Diverse University Communities
- Chapter 12 Sexual Behaviour and Gender Identity in Universities
- Chapter 13 The Mental Health of Teaching and Academic Staff
- Chapter 14 An Overview of Mental Disorders in Students and Staff
- Chapter 15 ‘Psychotic’ Disorders
- Chapter 16 Mood Disorders
- Chapter 17 Suicide at University
- Chapter 18 Mental Health Services on Campus and in the NHS
- Chapter 19 Students of the Professions and ‘Fitness to Practise’ Issues
- Chapter 20 Summing It All Up
- Index
- References
Summary
Regulatory bodies need clear, policies and pathways for fitness to practise concerns. Many FTP regulations conflate by implication the ideas of mental illness and irresponsible behaviour. Policies and protocols should be regularly reviewed, redeveloped and publicised in collaboration with students and recently graduated trainees as well as faculty policy makers. Most people experience mental illnesses at some point in our lives, so it’s impractical as well as unethical to exclude students from professions on such grounds. It is illogical to regard suffering from a mental illness as a disciplinary matter, although failure to address illness in a responsible way is unacceptable. Close-knit student cultures within professional specialities may encourage unhealthy coping strategies and put up obstacles to accessing treatment. Stigma and mistrust have passed into the culture, with a risk of untreated mental illness leading to avoidable suffering and impairment. The most intractable issue in FTP concerns is where a practitioner lacks insight into the consequences of their own behaviour. However, there is positive experience in managing episodic loss of insight during a known mental illness, using advance planning.
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- Improving University Mental Health , pp. 300 - 321Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024