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America's college students seem to be more stressed than ever, with a new report finding a sharp rise in cases of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and acute stress disorder (ASD) on campuses across the country. In a "national sample of U.S.

college students , we found a notable increase in the prevalence of PTSD and ASD," concluded a team led by Yusan Zhai, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Rates of PTSD rose by 4.1 percentage points between 2017 and 2022, and stress disorder diagnoses rose by 0.



5 percentage points, the data showed. Their findings were published in the journal JAMA Network Open . As Zhai's group explained, any number of events—campus shootings, sexual assault , physical violence and natural disasters , for example—can trigger either PTSD or ASD.

PTSD can lead to more persistent symptoms, while ASD's impact may be more transient—anywhere from a few days to a month. In their study, the Birmingham researchers focused on 2017 through 2022, "a period marked by escalated societal stressors and global health crises," including, of course, the pandemic. They looked at data from the ongoing Healthy Minds study, which tracks the mental health of over 392,000 people attending 332 different colleges and universities across the United States.

About 58% of the students were female. The data showed that during the study period, 19,349 (4.9%) of the college students had been diagnosed with PTSD, while 1,814 (0.

5%) had been given a diagnosis of ASD. "We o.

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