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Bristol students take mental health battle to the streets

Bristol Students Mental Health March

A tide of 500 students from the University of Bristol took the streets last Friday 25 May, marching around their campus in Clifton to demand better university mental health services. The demonstration was triggered by the deaths of three students in the last month, with a total of 10 deaths since October 2016, some of them confirmed as suicide.

Student Tom Phillips, one of the leaders of the march, said the waiting time for counselling services should be reduced to two weeks, from the current six weeks wait for low risk cases. He added that students should have as many sessions as they needed rather than having to reapply for help after just four sessions.

Physics and philosophy student Cristina Oehling, said: “We don’t have direct contact with tutors”, sometimes seeing them just “once or twice a year”. She considered that investing £1million on wellbeing “ends up being nothing when it’s divided by the number of students”.

The Vice Chancellor Professor Hugh Brady, who wasn’t at the march, told The Guardian recently “We are trying to do everything we can to help staff, to help students”.

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