Stress and anxiety have worsened among Minnesota's K-12 students, particularly females, as they have endured the social and academic upheaval of the pandemic along with the usual pressures on children.
Results of the 2022 Minnesota Student Survey were released Friday, with 29% of students reporting mental health problems that lasted six months or longer — up from 23% in 2019. Among female 11th graders, 45% reported long-term mental health, behavioral or emotional problems, up from 35% in 2019.
The statewide survey, conducted every three years, is a vital look at student health and wellbeing — but perhaps never more so than after the coming of the pandemic.
Months of school closures, online learning, mask mandates, sports restrictions and other measures took place in 2020 and 2021 to protect people. The disruptions to everyday life and academic progress reverberated in 2022.
"The pandemic fueled and worsened ongoing trends of our teens reporting long-term mental health problems," said Jan Malcolm, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Health. "It will take more research to know the interplay of all the factors, but it is clear that this is a crisis."
Among the 135,000 students who took the survey this spring, 43% said they had worried a lot over the prior month and 48% said they sometimes felt sad — even if they didn't understand why.
The results were no surprise to Richfield High School junior Antwane Ruiz. He could see the malaise that COVID-19 wrought on students after in-person learning resumed — for some in spring 2021 while still wearing masks, but for others in the fall.
"Being by yourself, you get so used it," he said. "You're like in this shell, and you don't want to break out."