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Student Mental Health in England: Navigating Support & Duty of Care

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Manage episode 484876292 series 3654608
Content provided by The Bench Report UK. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Bench Report UK or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

This episode explores the growing issue of student mental health in English universities. We look at how many students are affected, what factors contribute to poor mental health, and the debate around whether universities have a legal "duty of care" to their students. We discuss key court cases like Abrahart v University of Bristol and existing legal requirements like the Equality Act. We also cover government actions, university support services, and sector guidance aimed at improving student wellbeing and preventing tragedies.

Key Takeaways:

  • More students are reporting mental health issues, though surveys show even higher numbers.
  • Certain student groups face higher risks of mental health difficulties.
  • The legal question of a university's general duty of care to students is complex and hasn't been fully decided by the courts.
  • Universities do have legal duties under laws like the Equality Act 2010, requiring reasonable adjustments for disabled students.
  • Government and universities are working on initiatives, guidance, and funding to improve mental health support and suicide prevention.

Important Definitions and Concepts:

  • Duty of Care: A legal idea that someone has an obligation to take reasonable steps to avoid harming another person. Whether this fully applies to universities and their students is being debated.
  • Reasonable Adjustments: Changes universities must make for students with disabilities, including mental health conditions, so they aren't unfairly disadvantaged. This is required by the Equality Act.
  • Abrahart v University of Bristol: A court case that clarified universities' duties under the Equality Act for students with mental health conditions, but noted there wasn't a clear legal precedent for a general duty of care.

Discussion: Given the legal complexities and challenges universities face, how can they most effectively support students' mental health while respecting students' independence?

Source: Student mental health in England: Statistics, policy, and guidance
Research Briefing
Published Monday, 28 April, 2025

Support the show

Follow and subscribe to 'The Bench Report' on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube for new episodes on weekdays: thebenchreport.co.uk

Extended shownotes for selected episodes can be found at: thebenchreport.substack.com

Shape our next episode! Get in touch with an issue important to you - Producer Tom will grab another coffee and start the research!

Email us: [email protected]

Follow us on YouTube, X, Bluesky, Facebook and Instagram @BenchReportUK

Support us for bonus episodes and more.

No outside chatter: source material only taken from Hansard and the Parliament UK website.

Contains Parliamentary information repurposed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Student Mental Health in England: Navigating Support & Duty of Care (00:00:00)

2. How widespread is the issue? (00:00:29)

3. Consequences and statistics (00:01:26)

4. Underlying factors (00:02:26)

5. Suicide rates (00:02:56)

6. Legal duty of care - Universities (00:04:30)

7. Government position (00:05:34)

8. Existing legal obligations of Universities (00:06:14)

9. Government support / Student Space (00:06:54)

10. Student led initiatives (00:08:31)

11. Transparancy (00:08:48)

12. Conclusions (00:09:14)

52 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 484876292 series 3654608
Content provided by The Bench Report UK. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Bench Report UK or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

This episode explores the growing issue of student mental health in English universities. We look at how many students are affected, what factors contribute to poor mental health, and the debate around whether universities have a legal "duty of care" to their students. We discuss key court cases like Abrahart v University of Bristol and existing legal requirements like the Equality Act. We also cover government actions, university support services, and sector guidance aimed at improving student wellbeing and preventing tragedies.

Key Takeaways:

  • More students are reporting mental health issues, though surveys show even higher numbers.
  • Certain student groups face higher risks of mental health difficulties.
  • The legal question of a university's general duty of care to students is complex and hasn't been fully decided by the courts.
  • Universities do have legal duties under laws like the Equality Act 2010, requiring reasonable adjustments for disabled students.
  • Government and universities are working on initiatives, guidance, and funding to improve mental health support and suicide prevention.

Important Definitions and Concepts:

  • Duty of Care: A legal idea that someone has an obligation to take reasonable steps to avoid harming another person. Whether this fully applies to universities and their students is being debated.
  • Reasonable Adjustments: Changes universities must make for students with disabilities, including mental health conditions, so they aren't unfairly disadvantaged. This is required by the Equality Act.
  • Abrahart v University of Bristol: A court case that clarified universities' duties under the Equality Act for students with mental health conditions, but noted there wasn't a clear legal precedent for a general duty of care.

Discussion: Given the legal complexities and challenges universities face, how can they most effectively support students' mental health while respecting students' independence?

Source: Student mental health in England: Statistics, policy, and guidance
Research Briefing
Published Monday, 28 April, 2025

Support the show

Follow and subscribe to 'The Bench Report' on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube for new episodes on weekdays: thebenchreport.co.uk

Extended shownotes for selected episodes can be found at: thebenchreport.substack.com

Shape our next episode! Get in touch with an issue important to you - Producer Tom will grab another coffee and start the research!

Email us: [email protected]

Follow us on YouTube, X, Bluesky, Facebook and Instagram @BenchReportUK

Support us for bonus episodes and more.

No outside chatter: source material only taken from Hansard and the Parliament UK website.

Contains Parliamentary information repurposed under the Open Parliament Licence v3.0.

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Student Mental Health in England: Navigating Support & Duty of Care (00:00:00)

2. How widespread is the issue? (00:00:29)

3. Consequences and statistics (00:01:26)

4. Underlying factors (00:02:26)

5. Suicide rates (00:02:56)

6. Legal duty of care - Universities (00:04:30)

7. Government position (00:05:34)

8. Existing legal obligations of Universities (00:06:14)

9. Government support / Student Space (00:06:54)

10. Student led initiatives (00:08:31)

11. Transparancy (00:08:48)

12. Conclusions (00:09:14)

52 episodes

All episodes

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