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Higher Than Average Hopelessness Among Some Springfield, Mass., Students

A new survey shows that eighth grade students in Springfield, Massachusetts, are more likely to feel hopeless than their counterparts in the rest of the state.

Thirty-one percent of the eighth-graders who responded said they felt sad or hopeless every day for two weeks or more in a row, compared to 20 percent statewide.

The Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts conducted the survey last year.

The nonprofit's executive director, Jessica Collins, said the rates are even higher for some subgroups like LBGTQ students.

"Sixty percent of those students reported that they had felt sad or hopeless, versus 27 percent of students who identify as heterosexual," Collins said.

The survey also found that female students were twice as likely to feel hopeless as male students.

Students who identified as LGBT had more than double the rates of sustained hopelessness compared to heterosexual students. LGBT students also reported high rates of suicide attempts, suicide ideation and self-harm.
Credit Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts
/
Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts
Students who identified as LGBT had more than double the rates of sustained hopelessness compared to heterosexual students. LGBT students also reported high rates of suicide attempts, suicide ideation and self-harm.

Collins said she wants the new data to help policymakers, parents and behavioral health experts better understand the needs of Springfield's youth. 

Female students experienced double the rates of sustained hopelessness compared to males.
/ Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts
/
Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts
Female students experienced double the rates of sustained hopelessness compared to males.
When compared to all students in Massachusetts, eighth-graders in Springfield, across races/ethnicities, report higher rates of feeling sad or hopeless every day for two weeks or more in a row.
/ Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts
/
Public Health Institute of Western Massachusetts
When compared to all students in Massachusetts, eighth-graders in Springfield, across races/ethnicities, report higher rates of feeling sad or hopeless every day for two weeks or more in a row.

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Before joining New England Public Radio, Alden was a producer for the CBS NEWS program 60 Minutes. In that role, he covered topics ranging from art, music and medicine to business, education, and politics. Working with correspondent Morley Safer, he reported from locations across the United States as well as from India, Costa Rica, Italy, and Iraq.

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