More than 1 in 4 LGBTQ college students have considered dropping out of school because of mental health challenges, a survey released Thursday shows.

And a vast majority of LGBTQ students – 92% – say their mental health status has negatively impacted some part of their college experience, the survey by education resource and college ranking website BestColleges.com found.

The survey’s results raise concerns about the repercussions should fewer of these students complete college, according to BestColleges analyst Jessica Bryant, who authored the report.

“With educational outcomes, it doesn’t just end there with education, it impacts all future outcomes,” Bryant said. “If we are seeing less LGBTQIA students completing college, that will mean less LGBTQIA students in the workforce in the end, that’s not good either.”

Fewer LGBTQ graduates would be harmful to all parts of society, Bryant said. 

“We know for a fact how beneficial all kinds of diversity is to a workforce and to push innovation in all industries,” she said. “So if we are seeing less of these students completing college, less of them in the workforce, it’s like we’re going back, it’s like we’re regressing.”

Challenges facing LGBTQ college students

The survey comes as more young people are embracing new identities: A recent Gallup poll found that 21% of Generation Z Americans – those born from 1997 to 2003 and a group that makes up the majority of college students – now identify as LGBTQ.

As LGBTQ students enter college, it is crucial to acknowledge the mental health challenges they face navigating their identity in a new environment, said Keygan Miller, public training manager at The Trevor Project, which provides crisis and suicide prevention services for those under 25.