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Project 2 Prep

Use the menu on the side of the screen to navigate through my research proposal, research-in-progress report, synthesis matrix, and first draft. 

Research Proposal

Research Proposal

Kristen Barry

July 8, 2016

ENC 2135

Rachel Efstathion

 

Stressed Out: Anxiety in Students

Research Proposal

 

        As a now college freshmen, who has withstanded the stress of high school from AP classes, extracurriculars, and college applications, I have seen the toll stress and anxiety have taken on myself and my friends. Transitioning to college alone presents a new slew of stressors and the challenge of adjusting can be enough to cause anxiety. The challenges of college are even greater than those of high school, which can compound on previous mental illnesses or cause new ones in students. I am interested in researching anxiety in students, especially of the college age, particularly, the scope of anxiety and what is being done to help those who suffer from it. I am interested in finding answers to these questions:

  • What is the difference between stress and anxiety?

  • How common are anxiety disorders, general anxiety, and panic attacks in college-age teens?

  • What resources are available to help college kids deal with anxiety?

 

        I am interested in this topic because I have personally suffered from anxiety and anxiety attacks over the past two years and have found that it is a subject often misunderstood especially by my peers, friends, and even family. Anxiety is the most common mental illness in adults, yet lots of people go undiagnosed or do not receive any type of professional help for the problem. I have already begun some preliminary research and have found that anxiety has a variety of causes, symptoms, and treatments, but many people remain in the dark about the topic in general.

        I want to research this topic because it’s personal to me but is also a common problem that some of my peers might face or relate to. Beginning college in a new town with new people and classes brings a new reign of potential stressors, making college a breeding ground for anxiety in freshmen. Along with other mental illnesses, there are certain stigmas and ideas regarding them that aren’t always true. Because of this, I hope to shed some light on anxiety for my classmates, as well as further researching what can be done to help lessen its effects. On a college campus, I know there are resources available to students that they may not be aware of and I want to look into these as well. Mental illnesses are not regarded the same way as physical ailments but that doesn’t mean they cannot be treated or cured.  The problem I would like to focus on specifically is the ability for students to receive help, be it professional or just support from their peers, and how stressors can be lessened in college students’ lives to lessen current anxiety and prevent the development of future disorders. .

Research-in-Progress Report

Research-in-Progress Report

Kristen Barry

July 18, 2016

ENC 2135

Rachel Efstathion

 

Stressed Out: Anxiety in Students

Research-in-Progress Report

 

Research Problem

        Anxiety and anxiety disorders are problems faced by many college students, and I am aiming my research to find solutions that will allow more college students to receive help, from professionals or their friends and families, and reduce causes of anxiety to prevent development of these mental disorders.

 

What’s Still Missing From My Research

        I haven’t conducted my interview yet, but I hope to gain more information about specific things that are available here on campus for students who want to get help with their anxiety. I would also like to find some data about how anxiety can affect students’ performance academically and what we can do to make it easier for students to get the help they need.

 

Crosta, Peter. “Treatments for Anxiety.” Medical News Today. MediLexicon International Ltd, 23 July 2009. Web. 9            July 2016.

  • Source Summary: This page is from a medical website and details treatments for anxiety, ranging from self-help methods to types of medicine. The author details how each type of treatment can be used and its specific benefits. Finally, the page gives some tips for anxiety prevention.

  • How I plan to use this source: This source touches on multiple aspects of my research question, so it’s useful as part of my solutions to diagnosing anxiety, dealing with it, and hopefully preventing it in the future.

  • How it relates to other sources: The Kolar study also goes in depth about different medicines used to treat anxiety and their possible effects.

  • Why it’s valuable: This resource is valuable to my paper because it gives smaller bits of information about a range of topics I am researching. Specifically, the section on reducing anxiety and dealing with anxiety outside of professional help will be especially useful in assembling my solution.

 

“Generalized Anxiety Disorder.” Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Anxiety and Depression                            Association of America, 2016. Web. 11 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: The Anxiety and Depression Association of America is “an international nonprofit organization dedicated to the prevention, treatment, and cure of anxiety, depressive, obsessive-compulsive, and trauma-related disorders through education, practice, and research.” The website offers information on specific types of mental disorders including generalized anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, depression, and many more. The site also offers information on various types of treatment for the different disorders as well as general information.

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to reference this source as a starting place for general information about anxiety disorders and stress. This site offers information on all aspects of mental health and is a good resource for the part of my paper I would like to use to give an overview of anxiety and its disorders.

  • How it relates to other sources: Since this website includes so much information and is backed by a board of directors and professionals in the field, many of the other sources I’ve used cite the ADAA website for some parts of their own information. Because of this, I think it’s important to cite this as one of my sources since they offer details on so many aspects of my research.

  • Why it’s valuable: This is a valuable resource because it is a more original source since some of my other sources used this website, so it might be easier to directly quote from the ADAA website instead of using secondhand data from my other sources.

 

Kolar, Dušan and Kolar, Michael V. "Critical Review of Available Treatment Options for Treatment Refractory                    Depression and Anxiety - Clinical and Ethical Dilemmas." Medicinski Pregled / Medical Review 69.5 (2016): 171-          6. Print. 9 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: This source explores the use of different types of drugs, like benzodiazepines, used to treat various mental disorders, including anxiety. The article also explained how benzodiazepines are not longer the go-to treatment drug and also discussed alternative treatment medications and treatment-resistant cases, where the patient does not respond properly to the prescribed drugs.  

  • How I plan to use this source: This article goes in depth about multiple drugs used to treat anxiety and other mental illnesses, but also does a good job highlighting the problems with these medications as treatment. This article will be useful for my research paper because it also gives information about alternative treatment drugs for treatment-resistant patients, which is a lesser-known problem in the treatment of mental disorders.

  • How it relates to other sources: While other sources may mention the difficulties of treating anxiety disorders, this one gives in-depth explanations about how alternative medications were used when the usual medicated treatments do not work.

  • Why it’s valuable: It’s valuable to my assemblage because it gives detailed qualifiers to each of the mentioned medications. In my paper, I plan to focus on how getting treatment is a problem for students and how treatment doesn’t always work for students who do seek out professional help.

 

Lamis, Dorian A. and Jahn, Danielle R. "Parent–Child Conflict and Suicide Rumination in College Students: The               Mediating Roles of Depressive Symptoms and Anxiety Sensitivity." Journal of American College Health 61.2                 (2013): 106-13. Print. 9 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: This article begins with facts about suicide as “a leading cause of death among college-aged” people, with the necessary references to back up their statements. A “transition theory” is introduced as the many changes that students undergo during their transition time how this transitional time may put students more at risk for mental illness. Anxiety sensitivity is also presented as a factor into likeliness of other mental illnesses or panic disorders. A study was conducted with 552 undergraduate college students to examine a variety of risk factors, including anxiety sensitivity, that can be “associated with suicide rumination in college students”.

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this source to show the extent of which mental disorders are a problem specifically for college students and how susceptibility to anxiety can be a major factor of likelihood of suicidal thoughts or depression.

  • How it relates to other sources: It relates to other sources because it shows how “anxiety sensitivity” is a factor that is different in college students but this factor can be used to gauge risk to other mental problems. While anxiety isn’t the main focus of the article and its study, anxiety is an important factor in their findings.

  • Why it’s valuable: This piece is valuable in particular since anxiety and anxiety disorders are not the main focus of the study conducted. In this way, it shows how anxiety disorders are not just a problem within themselves but how they can be contributing factors to additional mental illness. This article is particularly focused on the college-age population which aligns with the focus of my research.

 

Lindsey, Cynthia. "Trait Anxiety in College Students: The Role of the Approval Seeking Schema and Separation                Individuation." College Student Journal 48.3 (2014): 407-18. Print. 9 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: The introduction of this article gives facts about levels of anxiety in college students. The study was then introduced to determine relationship between “attachment styles” and anxiety. Types of schemas, “psychological structures that organize ways of thinking and help interpret experiences”, are explained in detail and related to anxiety and humans’ emotional needs. Separation individuation was also found to be a factor towards anxiety in college students. The study is then explained to find relation between schemas, separation individuation, and anxiety in undergraduate students.  

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this source because it provides good statistics about anxiety in college students in its opening section, and the rest of the article provides different factors of anxiety in college students, which is a focus of my paper.

  • How it relates to other sources: This is another good article that provides data from a study that I can use to strengthen my paper by using information from multiple studies done on factors of anxiety in college students.

  • Why it’s valuable: This article is valuable because it provides a range of specific facts about anxiety in college students, which I can use as support throughout my paper. Also, these authors do a good job of explaining all the technical terms in a way that is easy to understand, which makes the source easier for me to use in my own paper. The article also mentions college students and going to counseling for anxiety, which relates to my interview with a counselor.

 

Mahmoud, Jihan S. R.; Staten, Ruth; Lennie, Terry A,; and Hall, Lynne A. "The Relationships of Coping, Negative             Thinking, Life Satisfaction, Social Support, and Selected Demographics with Anxiety of Young Adult College             Students." Journal of Child & Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing 28.2 (2015): 97-108. Print. 5 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: This source identifies the problem, methods, findings, and conclusion of their study involving different aspects of anxiety in college students. The authors give background to the study as well as listing and defining variables of the study. There is a section on coping with anxiety that analyzes different coping strategies and compares results of teens and adults.

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this as a resource for how coping with anxiety can make the problem worse for teens. I can also use the data about demographics of the participants, especially the differences between males and females.

  • How it relates to other sources: This study is similar to some of the previous studies in other sources, but each additional study studied slightly different problems and factors.

  • Why it’s valuable: The most valuable part of this article for my research is the parts about coping strategies and how well they worked or didn’t work for dealing with anxiety.

 

McGonigal, Kelly. “How to make stress your friend.” Online video clip. TED Talks. TEDGlobal (2013). Web. 5 July              2016.

  • Source Summary: This is one of the most-viewed TED Talks of all time and it is all about how you can change your body’s physical reaction to stress from a negative to a positive thing. The speaker, Kelly McGonigal is a psychologist who has given talks on stress for a long time, but now talks about how we can use our physical reaction to stress to help us in stressful situations.

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this source as main support for talking about how anyone can change their mental reaction to stress, which in turn changes your body’s reaction to stress, which can have long term health benefits.

  • How it relates to other sources: This source is different from the others because it’s a video of a speaker, which makes it more interesting to watch. However, this speech is not targeted directly to stress in college students like some of the other articles.

  • Why it’s valuable: The information presented in this video is a new spin on the old idea that all stress is bad. It also helps to answer what we can do to help prevent the buildup of stress that can lead to anxiety disorders.

 

Springs, Brenda B., ed. “Anxiety Diagnosis.” Healthline. Healthline Media, 18 August 2014. Web. 6 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: This page gives an overview of anxiety, symptoms shared by anxiety and other medical conditions, and diagnostics. In Part 4 of this page, it even lists common diagnostic tests for anxiety and briefly explains them. Some of these tests can be done online by the user and others are commonly used by doctors as part of the diagnosis.

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this source as a reference for some common and easy-to-use diagnosis tests as part of the solution to helping more people be diagnosed with anxiety to receive help. I also plan to reference the beginning comparison to anxiety and other bodily illnesses.

  • How it relates to other sources: Many of my sources give symptoms of anxiety, but this one goes a step above and has a list of physical symptoms that may be signs of other illnesses.

  • Why it’s valuable: This source is particularly valuable because it acknowledges the difficulty in diagnosing anxiety as an illness, which is a big part of my main research problem. The comparisons it makes between anxiety and other ailments will useful for my own assemblage of solutions to diagnosis as a problem.

 

Roberge, Pasquale; Normand-Lauziere, Francois; Raymond, Isabelle; Luc, Mireille; Tanguay-Bernard, Marie; et al.           "Generalized Anxiety Disorder in Primary Care: Mental Health Services use and Treatment Adequacy." BMC               Family Practice 16 (2015): 1-11. Print. 6 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: The introduction of this academic journal opens with the problems of official diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder. It gives multiple reasons why GAD is not recognized by doctors as often as it should. The article then discusses how “treatment adequacy” is “lacking” for GAD and other anxiety disorders. Their study was then introduced to look into indicators of GAD and “experience of care of primary care patients with anxiety or depressive disorders”. The study used multiple surveying forms including waiting room interviews, telephone, and web interviews. The subject population was mostly adult, urban females, but results showed that a majority of them met requirements of depression or anxiety disorders, only 36% of participants received treatment that was  “adequate according to our indicators of care.”

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this scholarly journal for its research and data involving adequacy of treatment and diagnosis for anxiety disorders, which is part of my main research problem.

  • How it relates to other sources: This study wasn’t conducted directly at the college-age population like some of the other sources I’ve used, but it still researched a major part of my research question. While this article is lengthy, it still gives a thorough report of the study, research, data, and results all in language that normal, non-medical readers can comprehend.

  • Why it’s valuable: This journal is valuable because it studies the adequacy of treatment and diagnosis, which isn’t explicitly studied by my other sources. Much of the data in this journal relates directly to my research problem and gives support for why anxiety is so difficult to treat.

 

Weaver, Sandra Long. "High Anxiety." Chronicle of Higher Education (2016): 25-7. Print. 6 July 2016.

  • Source Summary: This article by Sandra Long Weaver focuses specifically on anxiety in college students, specifically, how common anxiety is in students and how often they receive help. Weaver makes a comparison that students have less of a support system in college than they may have been used to in college, which can cause students to feel alone or have a lower chance of seeking help. Weaver also referenced how race, particularly African-American and East Indian students, and how it affected their mental health levels and treatment.The article also talks about research by the National Alliance on Mental Illness that found “that one in four students have a diagnosable illness” but 40% “do not seek help.” Weaver concludes by discussing the rising problem of anxiety and what UCF in particular has done to improve treatment and diagnosis rates.

  • How I plan to use this source: I plan to use this source as support to show the problems of diagnosis and treatment for college students with anxiety and use some of the studies mentioned for statistical evidence.

  • How it relates to other sources: This article is similar to the Springs site because both cover a wide range of topics more briefly but hit on the main points of my research. This article references multiple studies and fits their information into simpler language than some of the journals I referenced about one specific study conducted.

  • Why it’s valuable: This article is valuable for my research because it gives specific data that I can use as support and makes statements that align with my research problem. In this way, I can use information from this article and shape it to help support my own ideas about a solution.

Synthesis Matrix

Synthesis Matrix

This matrix shows an organzied chart that outlines the information presented in my literature review. Compiling the information from my sources to the chart before composing the literature review was useful to connect the related topics across my sources. 

First Draft

First Draft

Kristen Barry

ENC 2135

July 19, 2016

Rachel Efstathion

​

Stressed Out: Anxiety in Students

First Draft

 

Introduction

 

        As my fellow college freshmen would agree, entering college is an extremely scary and stressful time. Of course, it also opens the door to a world of new opportunities, independence, and friendships, but all these things start to add up and when the teenage mind tries to balance all these things, it gets stressed, anxious, or even depressed. Anxiety and anxiety disorders are problems of increasing magnitude, especially in the college population. This new world of opportunity that creates stress in students and can intensify pre-existing mental health conditions. I want to research the problem of anxiety in college students because my sister and I both have anxiety and anxiety attacks and I know anxiety is one of the most prevalent mental health conditions in teenagers, regardless of the stigmas that keep mental health issues on the “down low”. I will explore causes and symptoms of anxiety in students, as well as treatments and processes that can help reduce anxiety and stress. Amid the many opportunities on this college campus, I will also focus on what specific resources are available to my fellow Seminoles who want to seek professional treatment or support for their stress or mental illness. 

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Literature Review

 

Anxiety and Disorders in General

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        All my sources except for “Treatments for Anxiety” (Crosta) give some definition of anxiety, anxiety disorders, or symptoms. All the authors of these sources would agree that anxiety is a common problem; “everyone experiences stress and anxiety at one time or another,” the Anxiety and Depression Association of America’s website blatantly states. Many of the authors, especially Lamis, Jahn, Mahmoud et al, and Weaver, would also agree that anxiety and stress are increasing problems especially for college students. Increased levels of stress and anxiety may put the body at risk for other health or mental problems, as shown by Kolar, Kolar, Lamis, Jahn, and McGonigal. Brenda Spriggs, who has a PhD in public health and medicine, lists some common physical symptoms of anxiety, including “racing heart, shortness of breath, shaking, sweating, chills…” and many more. These symptoms are accepted generally as the most common physical symptoms of anxiety.

 

Diagnosis and Problems if Left Undiagnosed

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        McGonigal may have been the only author to go as far as to explicitly state that we can, and should, use our own stress to our advantage. Kolar, Kolar, Lamis, Jahn, Lindsey, Spriggs, and Weaver would agree that leaving anxiety to fester isn’t the way to go. These sources would agree that anxiety can worsen over time if the stressors causing the anxiety aren’t addressed or treated. Therapy and medication are common treatments for anxiety disorders once they are diagnosed, but many cases remain undiagnosed and treatments do not always work as they should. Kolar and Kolar smartly put it that “prescribing medications that could provide an instant [relief]... is popular nowadays in the era when quick solutions… are expected” (172). The same article also describes the common medicines used as treatments and their fallacies (172-175). There is no simple cure for anxiety just like there is no single cause of it (Spriggs 1), and anxiety can worsen cases of other health problems, as Spriggs claims that “untreated anxiety can increase your risk of more severe conditions” and Lamis and Jahn reported that “depressive and anxious symptoms have been identified as strong predictors of suicide risk in college students” (107). This means that anxiety is a problem if left undiagnosed and untreated since it could lead to additional problems down the road. Lindsey, Spriggs, and Weaver all commented on patients seeking treatment for their anxiousness, but Weaver reported that 40% of college students “[did] not seek help” for their problems. Spriggs revealed the problems of diagnosis of generalized anxiety disorder by primary care physicians (2). Based on Weaver’s study, primary care doctors only diagnosed their patients with GAD about two out of three times, leaving roughly 33% of the diagnosable patients without professional treatment (5).

 

Treatment Types

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        Crosta reports that anxiety “can be treated medically, with psychological counseling, or independently” and the ADAA, Kolar, and Kolar also explore different types of treatment and their benefits. Crosta, the ADAA, and McGonigal have particular focus on self-help methods for dealing with anxiety and reducing stress to improve life overall. Crosta lists specific self-help tactics, like “[practicing] deep abdominal breathing… [learning] to replace ‘negative self talk’ with ‘coping self talk’, and [talking] with a person who is supportive”. Many of these items are discussed by McGonigal, whose main purpose is to help her audience realize how they can positively react to their own stress and improve their long term help. Both Crosta and McGonigal particularly acknowledge that talking or confiding in a friend or family member can help with stress and anxiety. The ADAA offers many “Self-Help Publications & Materials” in addition to many resources, like counseling centers, they offer connections to for their readers. Crosta, Kolar, and Kolar give more detailed insight into the common medications used to treat anxiety and also report some information about possible problems with these medicines. Treatments and treatment methods are still being researched and developed and Kolar and Kolar show that even with benzodiazepines, “commonly prescribed medications in the treatment of anxiety disorders in the last few decades of the 20th century” (172), “strong opposition to the use of BZDs in psychiatry and strict monitoring of benzodiazepine prescriptions started in the last decade” (172). The “challenges to detection and treatment of mental disorders” (Spriggs 2) is an ongoing issue that is continuously trying to be relieved.

 

Treatment Availability: Getting Help

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      Lamis, Jahn, and Lindsey assess the importance of college students to try and seek help or at least to consider what may be causing their anxiety, along with repercussions because of this mental illness. These authors focused more on the professional treatments for anxiety and mental disorders, but Crosta, the ADAA, and McGonigal give more informal help methods, since not all anxiety is at the clinical level. Anxiety is reported as a major concern of college students and “40% of college students surveyed identified anxiety as their primary reason for seeking help” (Linsey 407). “Treatment-resistant conditions” (Kolar, Kolar 172) are a whole other problem because they “require [a] more intensive multimodal treatment approach” (Kolar, Kolar 172).

 

Reducing Stressors and Helping Others

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        As previously mentioned, there are self-help methods to treating anxiety in additional to the more formal approached. Crosta states that “in some cases, anxiety may be treated at home, without a doctor’s supervision”. This type of treatment is in line with McGonigal’s main idea of “how to make stress your friend”. These two authors would agree that not all cases of anxiety are clinical cases, so sometimes just reducing stressors in life and practicing a healthier lifestyle can reduce the anxiety and prevent it from becoming a more extreme case or disorder. Crosta, the ADAA, McGonigal, Kolar, Kolar, and Mahmoud et al emphasize the importance of “support from family and friends” (ADAA) to coping with stress and anxiety. Having a healthy support system is critical for any case of anxiety, whether it has been diagnosed or not. Crosta and the ADAA provide information and resources of various types of things that can help reduce anxiety and ways to help others who may be struggling. McGonigal explains dealing with the stress in our body on a chemical level, which is not a topic the other sources do not address in the same way. She proposes that “when oxytocin is released in the stress response, it is motivating you to seek support” and that “this stress hormone strengthens your heart” and can even reverse previous stress-related damage on the heart. Anyone can use this as a natural remedy to the toll of prior stress on their heart. By comforting physical contact and reaching out to trusted friends or family to talk, the oxytocin can help heal the heart.

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Interview

 

        I reached out to the University Counseling Center (UCC) for an interview about anxiety in college students, and I was able to interview with a university counselor, Madalyn Conetta. Even with the quick turnaround I needed to meet the deadlines for this paper, Ms. Conetta went out of her way to make some time in her busy schedule, with many students who make appointments especially during this time of transition to college, to schedule an interview with me. She could’ve told me she was “too busy” to sit and talk with me, but her care to make the time for me increased the credibility of the UCC and how much they really do care for their students. Ms. Conetta graduated with her degree in social work in 2009 and has been a counselor since then. She has worked as a university counselor here at FSU for two years, but previously worked at a center that focused on treating eating disorders, a juvenile justice program working with boys who had court-ordered therapy, and a hospital memory disorder clinic. With this background, she has a wide range of experience in multiple areas of her field.

        For my interview, I brought some facts and statistics from my research to see how they compared to Ms. Conetta’s experienced. I had found that about 20-25% of teens have some degree of an anxiety disorder (“Generalized Anxiety”) and she wasn’t surprised by this number, even saying that “like 90 percent of people have a mental illness at some time.”. She informed me of the alarming fact that anxiety is the top reason students on campus seek help from the counseling center, followed by depression, relationship problems, and adjustment to college. This fact wasn’t surprising to me based on my introductory research, but it further solidified the importance of my topic, since anxiety is so prevalent in college kids, especially freshmen who have just left home for the first time. We discussed the many ways the transition to college life is cause for increased anxiety in the freshmen college kids and then focused more specifically on my research problem.

        Ms. Conetta’s insight into the reasons for  lack of diagnosis and the possible treatments available here on campus helped shed some light on my research problem.

Previous to being on a college campus, the “financial barrier” from the cost of professional treatment along with the “mental health stigma, from society or family” were major reasons that stand in the way of adults or teens getting help for their anxiety or mental disorders (Conetta). The stigma may come from the client’s own family, society in general, or even from their peers. This problem especially arises with the massive changes that happen as students enter college. They may have had pre-existing mental conditions, or the transition caused abnormal levels of anxiety, but when the student sees that everyone else appears to be fine, without any therapy, they should be able to manage on their own, too. If a student beats the odds and is in the minority that does get professional help (Weaver), what kind of help can they expect from the UCC? If a student comes to counseling for help with their anxiety, whether it be a disorder or unhealthy stress or anxiousness, they can expect free counseling and therapy from university counselors, and may be referred to a psychiatrist if medicine is found to be helpful as part of their treatment plan. Since “not everyone has clinical level anxiety” (Conetta) or they might just be stressed, they have the options of individual or group therapy, biofeedback (a individual, computer-based program with relaxation training that teaches how to deal with stress or anxious systems), or RENEW (peer based mentoring for stress management and study skills). All these options are free, on campus, and can be accessed through the UCC.

        The final segment of my interview focused on what we, as students, can do to reduce the stigmas on anxiety and treatment and how we can make college a less stressful environment. Ms. Conetta informed me that “de-stigmatizing” mental disorders would be a good way to make it easier for students to get help. On a more personal level, she told me that “engaging in self-care” and maintaining a healthy diet and sleep schedule are all important, seemingly simple things that can quickly make us more prone to stress if we aren’t taking care of our body. As far as reducing the stress in our environment to prevent development of further disorders, she recommended balancing priorities, since we are now more responsible for ourselves than ever before, establishing a new support system since “we are interpersonal beings”, and “[decreasing] the pressure students put on themselves” (Conetta), just to name a few tactics. Overall, Ms. Conetta’s knowledge about anxiety in students aligned with my research and she gave me lots of different resources I can look into for ways students can get help and reduce their own stress and anxiety.

 

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Conclusion

 

            Before doing the research specifically for this paper, I had some knowledge already about anxiety, stress, and mental disorders in general, but my research problem helped me concentrate my new knowledge of these problems in college students. I knew anxiety was a big problem, and that anxiety rates in teens and kids are higher now than ever before, but I was surprised by my research and interview to learn the true significance of the problem. From my interview with a university counselor, I learned that anxiety is the top reason students seek out counseling here at Florida State and that stress and anxiety are much higher in college kids than in the general population. My opinions about this topic haven’t changed so much as they have developed, from discovering that anxiety is a much bigger problem than I originally thought. The information from my own research aligned with what I learned from my interview, but Ms. Conetta was able to provide a deeper look at solutions to these problems that will especially useful moving forward with this topic. For my next project, I will take this information and further research into the resources available for students and ways we can reduce anxiety and stress.

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Bibliography

 

Conetta, Madalyn. Personal Interview. 12 July 2016.

Crosta, Peter. “Treatments for Anxiety.” Medical News Today. MediLexicon International Ltd, 23 July 2009. Web. 9             July 2016.

“Generalized Anxiety Disorder.” Anxiety and Depression Association of America. Anxiety and Depression                             Association of America, 2016. Web. 11 July 2016.

Kolar, Dušan and Kolar, Michael V. "Critical Review of Available Treatment Options for Treatment Refractory                     Depression and Anxiety - Clinical and Ethical Dilemmas." Medicinski Pregled / Medical Review 69.5 (2016): 171-           6. Print. 9 July 2016.

Lamis, Dorian A. and Jahn, Danielle R. "Parent–Child Conflict and Suicide Rumination in College Students: The                 Mediating Roles of Depressive Symptoms and Anxiety Sensitivity." Journal of American College Health 61.2                 (2013): 106-13. Print. 9 July 2016.

Lindsey, Cynthia. "Trait Anxiety in College Students: The Role of the Approval Seeking Schema and Separation                   Individuation." College Student Journal 48.3 (2014): 407-18. Print. 9 July 2016.

Mahmoud, Jihan S. R.; Staten, Ruth; Lennie, Terry A,; and Hall, Lynne A. "The Relationships of Coping, Negative                 Thinking, Life Satisfaction, Social Support, and Selected Demographics with Anxiety of Young Adult College               Students." Journal of Child & Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing 28.2 (2015): 97-108. Print. 5 July 2016.

McGonigal, Kelly. “How to make stress your friend.” Online video clip. TED Talks. TEDGlobal     (2013). Web. 5 July             2016.

Spriggs, Brenda B., ed. “Anxiety Diagnosis.” Healthline. Healthline Media, 18 August 2014. Web. 6 July 2016.

Roberge, Pasquale; Normand-Lauziere, Francois; Raymond, Isabelle; Luc, Mireille; Tanguay-Bernard, Marie; et al.             "Generalized Anxiety Disorder in Primary Care: Mental Health Services use and Treatment Adequacy." BMC Family Practice 16 (2015): 1-11. Print. 6 July 2016.

Weaver, Sandra Long. "High Anxiety." Chronicle of Higher Education (2016): 25-7. Print. 6 July 2016.

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