Cultural Sensitivity and Counseling Approaches for Student Mental Wellbeing in a Globalized Era
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61919/npyp7510Keywords:
Cultural Sensitivity, Counseling, Student Mental Health, Higher Education, Mixed Methods, Engagement, DiversityAbstract
Background: Increasing cultural, ethnic, and linguistic diversity in higher education has heightened the need for mental health services that are sensitive to the cultural backgrounds of students. Despite growing awareness, gaps persist in the integration of cultural sensitivity within university counseling frameworks, potentially affecting access, satisfaction, and engagement with psychological support. Objective: This study aimed to evaluate the impact of culturally sensitive counseling approaches on student satisfaction and engagement, identify barriers to accessing mental health services among diverse student groups, and assess institutional strategies for providing culturally responsive care. Methods: A mixed-methods design was employed, combining quantitative surveys with 200 university students and qualitative interviews with 12 counselors and 40 students across three multicultural higher education institutions. Quantitative data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, inferential tests, and multiple regression to assess associations between perceived counselor cultural sensitivity and key outcomes. Qualitative data were subjected to thematic analysis to identify institutional practices, perceived barriers, and facilitators of culturally competent mental health support. Results: High perceived counselor cultural sensitivity was strongly associated with increased student satisfaction (β = 0.55, p<0.001) and engagement (β = 0.45, p=0.004), with stigma, lack of culturally competent services, and language barriers emerging as primary obstacles. Qualitative findings highlighted the importance of culturally competent staff, multilingual support, flexible services, and targeted outreach. Conclusion: Integrating culturally sensitive counseling practices in higher education is essential to enhance access, engagement, and psychological outcomes for diverse student populations. Institutions should prioritize counselor training, multilingual services, and inclusive outreach to address persistent barriers and promote equitable mental health care.
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Copyright (c) 2025 Samina Mustafa, Syed Gufran Sadiq Zaidi, Nurshat Absheken, Ruth Abosede Murtala, Nazerke Rakymova Yerkebulankyzy, Syeda Kisa Zahra, Mohammad Sabur Ehsan, Taiba Fazli (Author)

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.