Universal Brief Mental Health Screenings for First-Year Medical Students: A 6-Year Retrospective of the Keck Checks Program

Author:

Young Chantal1,Juliani Maria2

Affiliation:

1. is director of medical student well-being, director, Office of Well-being, and assistant professor of clinical medical education and psychiatry, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; ORCID:.

2. is associate director of medical student well-being and associate professor of clinical medical education and psychiatry, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; ORCID:.

Abstract

Medical students are at elevated risk for mental health difficulties and may struggle to ask for help. Innovative outreach programs are warranted to reduce barriers and ensure that students receive the professional care they need and deserve. This article provides a 6-year retrospective of the Keck Checks program, a well-established initiative that offered universal 15-minute mental health screenings to every first-year medical student at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California from fall 2016 to fall 2022. This early detection program was designed to combat barriers to seeking mental health care by normalizing the concept of all students meeting with a psychologist early in their academic careers. The Keck Checks program showed promising feasibility, with a single full-time clinician successfully hosting appointments for entire classes of first-year medical students (mean of 189 students per class) during approximately 4 months, in addition to other work duties. Participation rates were high, with 715 eligible students (76.3%) choosing to attend their Keck Check. Students were frequently referred to follow-up services during the Keck Check, including mental health care (n = 360 [50.4%] referred), occupational therapy (n = 72 [10.1%] referred), and academic support services (n = 60 [8.4%] referred). Next steps include possible expansion of similar programs to medical students in years 2 to 4, residents, and physicians, as well as understanding the effect of brief mental health screenings on long-term help-seeking, adherence to mental health treatment plans, and general educational or professional success. Brief, universal mental health screenings are a relatively low-cost, high-impact approach for medical schools to consider in supporting the mental health of their student body.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Education,General Medicine

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