Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study

This preliminary study aimed to explore postgraduate students’ perceptions of mental wellbeing and mental health literacy at a university in the East of England. Due to government widening participation initiatives, more students from minority groups are attending universities, most of which have ex...

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Main Authors: Helen Payne, Kristen Leslie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-03-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/15/3/311
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author Helen Payne
Kristen Leslie
author_facet Helen Payne
Kristen Leslie
author_sort Helen Payne
collection DOAJ
description This preliminary study aimed to explore postgraduate students’ perceptions of mental wellbeing and mental health literacy at a university in the East of England. Due to government widening participation initiatives, more students from minority groups are attending universities, most of which have expanded their wellbeing support offers to students through dedicated Student Wellbeing Services and student success teams. This study employed mixed methods with two stages. The first stage, quantitative data collection, employed an online survey (designed by the first author), analysed by Qualtrics with resulting data used to select themes for the second stage, a focus group discussion, analysed by inductive thematic analysis. Five themes and eight sub-themes were identified: 1. Expectations: The university and students. 2. Judgement: Personal perceptions and mental health stigma. 3. Stress: University disorganisation and how stress feels. 4. International Students: Difficulties with studying and healthcare. 5. The National Health Service. The data shed further light on students’ levels of understanding of mental wellbeing (mental health literacy), providing important information for HE policymaking on students’ expectations of support for mental wellbeing. Participants advocated for more promotion of real student experiences of dealing with mental health issues and clearer signposting of support services to further tackle stigma.
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spelling doaj-art-0ab70ba0bc024529b003792fea0bb1e92025-08-20T02:42:42ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022025-03-0115331110.3390/educsci15030311Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case StudyHelen Payne0Kristen Leslie1Department of Psychology, Sport and Geography, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield AL10 9AB, UKDepartment of Psychology, Sport and Geography, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield AL10 9AB, UKThis preliminary study aimed to explore postgraduate students’ perceptions of mental wellbeing and mental health literacy at a university in the East of England. Due to government widening participation initiatives, more students from minority groups are attending universities, most of which have expanded their wellbeing support offers to students through dedicated Student Wellbeing Services and student success teams. This study employed mixed methods with two stages. The first stage, quantitative data collection, employed an online survey (designed by the first author), analysed by Qualtrics with resulting data used to select themes for the second stage, a focus group discussion, analysed by inductive thematic analysis. Five themes and eight sub-themes were identified: 1. Expectations: The university and students. 2. Judgement: Personal perceptions and mental health stigma. 3. Stress: University disorganisation and how stress feels. 4. International Students: Difficulties with studying and healthcare. 5. The National Health Service. The data shed further light on students’ levels of understanding of mental wellbeing (mental health literacy), providing important information for HE policymaking on students’ expectations of support for mental wellbeing. Participants advocated for more promotion of real student experiences of dealing with mental health issues and clearer signposting of support services to further tackle stigma.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/15/3/311higher educationmental wellbeingmental health literacypsychology postgraduatesstigmacase study
spellingShingle Helen Payne
Kristen Leslie
Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study
Education Sciences
higher education
mental wellbeing
mental health literacy
psychology postgraduates
stigma
case study
title Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study
title_full Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study
title_fullStr Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study
title_short Postgraduate Psychology Students’ Perceptions of Mental Wellbeing and Mental Health Literacy: A Preliminary Mixed-Method Case Study
title_sort postgraduate psychology students perceptions of mental wellbeing and mental health literacy a preliminary mixed method case study
topic higher education
mental wellbeing
mental health literacy
psychology postgraduates
stigma
case study
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/15/3/311
work_keys_str_mv AT helenpayne postgraduatepsychologystudentsperceptionsofmentalwellbeingandmentalhealthliteracyapreliminarymixedmethodcasestudy
AT kristenleslie postgraduatepsychologystudentsperceptionsofmentalwellbeingandmentalhealthliteracyapreliminarymixedmethodcasestudy