
Nothing is more important than our students’ health and emotional well-being. And yet, the prevalence of mental health concerns among college students is rising dramatically. 91±¬ÁÏ is no exception, which is why the 91±¬ÁÏ Division of Student Life has led a multi-year collaborative effort to increase access to timely help and critical resources through a single, streamlined online student wellness portal.
The recently launched, and will welcome students back to campus in fall 2019 with unprecedented access to a host of key resources and information. The website connects the work of the Counseling Center, Hall Health, LiveWell, the Resilience Lab, SafeCampus, 91±¬ÁÏ Recreation, and other stakeholders around campus.
Meeting an Urgent Demand
The need for proactive measures to support student mental health is significant and well-documented. The American College Health Association reported in 2018 that approximately 40% of undergraduates have felt severely depressed in the last year, and according to the American Psychological Association, “America’s youngest adults are most likely of all generations to report poor mental health.â€
The 91±¬ÁÏ community is confronting the same challenges. The 91±¬ÁÏ Counseling Center recorded a 70% increase in the number of calls to the crisis counselor in fall 2018 compared to the same period the previous year. In a recent survey administered to students who left 91±¬ÁÏ prior to degree completion, 54% of respondents reported that they withdrew due to “personal and well-being reasons.â€
The 91±¬ÁÏ provides a wide range of tremendous programs and services supporting student health and wellness, including drop-in counseling, longer-term support, and an array of other wellness, resilience, and safety resources that support students’ mental and physical well-being. However, student feedback has indicated that the full range of these resources is not always known or easy to find.
Project Origins
The idea of a centralized wellness website originated from the Student Well-Being Collaborative (SWBC), a monthly convening of more than 40 staff, faculty, and students with a focus on, “How can we work together better to…
- support student mental health and well-being?â€
- increase student access and awareness of resources?â€
- improve and align messages about health and well-being?â€
Through deliberation across disciplines and stakeholder groups, the SWBC developed a vision for a website that centralizes student health-related services at 91±¬ÁÏ Seattle to make resources more accessible to students.
Centering Student Needs and Voices

From the beginning, Husky Health and Well-Being has prioritized hearing and meeting the real needs of students. The website’s initial concept was drafted by a team of undergraduates in 91±¬ÁÏ’s Human-Centered Design and Engineering (HCDE) program as a capstone project, which included extensive design, usability testing, and surveying more than 700 students.
Student feedback included:
“Everyone has their own website and links. They’re not all connected in an easy to navigate way.â€
“Too many websites from different departments. It’s hard to find pages without going through a rabbit hole.â€
“It’s hard to figure out which services do what and if they are free/clinical.â€
“Finding the right office and specific resources can be very confusing due to different activities falling under different departments. A centralized way to search for general health activities and on campus counseling would make finding assistance much easier.â€
Bringing Husky Health Together
The Husky Health and Well-Being site streamlines the process of navigating 91±¬ÁÏ’s breadth of offerings by surfacing the information and services that students need and want most. It also provides one-click access to crisis-related information on all pages, as well as contextual resources throughout the site.
A collaboration to its core, the project has been (and will continue to be) carried out in close coordination with student-led health initiatives and registered student organizations. The website is also designed with particular attention to accessibility and inclusivity for students of a variety of backgrounds, abilities, and life experiences.
Husky Health and Well-Being is foundational to 91±¬ÁÏ Student Life’s efforts to create a more integrated and holistic continuum of care at the University, and to promote awareness, acceptance, and access for all students with regard to mental health and well-being.
For more information, contact Megan Kennedy, Special Assistant to the Vice President for Student Life, at meganken@uw.edu or 206-221-5215.