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Report finds links between school racism and student mental health, substance use

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Report finds links between school racism and student mental health, substance use
Photo by Keith Helfrich / Unsplash

A recent report examined the relationship between experiencing racism in school and several health outcomes for high school students. The study included students from all racial and ethnic groups across the United States. Researchers looked at whether these experiences were connected to poor mental health, substance use, and suicide risk.

The report found associations between students experiencing racism in school and these negative outcomes. This means that when racism was reported, these other concerns were also more likely to be present. The report did not provide specific numbers about how strong these connections were or how many students were affected.

It's important to understand that this was an observational report, not a controlled experiment. This means it can show that things are connected, but it cannot prove that experiencing racism directly causes mental health problems, substance use, or suicide risk. Many other factors could be involved.

Readers should take from this report that there appears to be a concerning link between racism in schools and student wellbeing. However, more research would be needed to understand exactly how these factors are related and what specific interventions might help.

What this means for you:
Report shows links between school racism and student mental health concerns, but more research is needed.
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