Mental health Challenge Competition: Achieving a step change in mental health outcomes for all students

Our Challenge Competition funded higher education providers to generate and test new approaches to improve mental health outcomes for students. 

We funded 10 collaborative projects which brought together over 60 universities, colleges, charities and NHS organisations. We contributed £6 million to the fund, with match funding of £8.5 million from providers and partners, amounting to a total of £14.5 million investment.

The projects, which began in 2019 and concluded in 2022, focused on one or more of these priorities:

  • Transitions from school or college into HE, including innovative approaches to pre-entry support and outreach activity, and from undergraduate into postgraduate study or employment, with a focus on susceptible or vulnerable groups.
  • Programmes of early intervention such as providing new forms of mental health literacy training to staff and students or developing student analytics to inform improved and enhanced interventions.
  • Approaches which provide a ‘step change’ in support for students: for example, developing an integrated approach between provider-level support services and those of local primary care and mental health services; or addressing barriers to accessing support across services and sectors.

The programme was evaluated independently, and the projects’ impacts and outputs shared in our resources library to help higher education providers improve support for student mental health and wellbeing.

Details of funded projects

Lead provider Project details

University of Birmingham

 

Enhancing student mental health through innovation and partnership

The project created a hub of qualified therapists and volunteers, providing therapeutic interventions for students in open-plan safe spaces without the need for appointments or waiting lists. 

Project partners:

  • The Children’s Society
  • Birmingham Women’s and Children’s NHS Foundation Trust
  • Forward Thinking Birmingham.

University of Derby

 

Education for mental health: enhancing student mental health through curriculum and pedagogy

The project created a national online toolkit for academics that provides guidance on designing curriculum and assessments that facilitate better student mental health. 

Project partners:

  • King's College London
  • SMaRteN (Student Mental Health Research Network)
  • Aston University
  • Student Minds
  • Advance HE.

University of Keele

Start to success – a whole community approach to supporting student transitions into, through and beyond university

The project championed a ‘whole community’ approach to mental health, working with partners to remove barriers, improve support and enable student success. 

Project partners:

  • Keele Students' Union and Postgraduate Association
  • Staffordshire University (and Students' Union)
  • Stoke-on-Trent City Council
  • Staffordshire County Council
  • North Staffordshire Combined Healthcare NHS Trust
  • Midlands Partnership Foundation NHS Trust
  • University Hospitals of North Midlands Foundation Trust
  • Stoke on Trent College
  • Stoke 6th Form College
  • Newcastle and Stafford Colleges Group
  • Staffordshire Police
  • Together Active (previously SASSOT).

University of Lincoln

 

Transitioning students effectively: a student-led approach to mental health support

The project created a peer-to-peer approach, developing processes, procedures and digital tools to enable students to support each other and themselves.

Project partners:

  • Bishop Grosseteste University
  • Lincolnshire Police
  • NHS (South West Lincolnshire Clinical Commissioning Group)
  • Lincolnshire County Council (Adult Care and Community Wellbeing, Children’s and Mental Health Services)
  • UoL Students' Union
  • Bishop Grosseteste University Students’ Unions
  • Lincoln College
  • Unihealth
  • Expert Self Care.

University of Liverpool

Working in partnership to improve student mental health

The project developed sustainable clinical intervention and improved joined up working through clear referral pathways and interventions.

Project partners:

  • Liverpool John Moores University
  • MCT NHS Foundation Trust
  • Student Health Centre Brownlow Hill
  • Academic Health Science Network.

Newcastle University

BRinging Innovation to Graduate Mental Health TogethER (BRIGHTER)

The project provided evidence-based psychological therapy to students in an ‘in house’ clinic run, and early intervention through curriculum-based ‘mind management’ skills training.

Project partners:

  • Northumberland, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust
  • Child Outcomes Research Consortium
  • University of Northumbria at Newcastle
  • Newcastle University Students' Union.

University of Northumbria at Newcastle

Mental health and analytics: a continuum approach to understanding and improving student mental health

This project focused on innovative integration of technology, advanced educational data analytics, student relationship management, and effective models of support.

Project partners: 

  • Universities UK
  • Buckinghamshire New University
  • University of East London
  • Civitas Learning International
  • Jisc
  • The Student Room Group
  • Microsoft Education
  • Papyrus
  • University of Bristol.

University of Nottingham

International student mental health – good practice guidance and intervention case studies

This project aimed to discover what works in supporting the mental health and wellbeing of international students, creating case studies and a practical toolkit.

Project partners:

  • University of Nottingham Students' Union
  • Student Minds
  • SOAS
  • SOAS Students' Union
  • University of Leeds
  • University of Leeds Students' Union
  • Campuslife.

University of Sussex

SITUATE: Students In Transition at University: Aiming To Enhance mental and social health and wellbeing

This project developed a mental health peer education training programme delivered by older students to younger students at stages of transition.

Project partners: The Mental Health Foundation.

The University of the West of England, Bristol

Student mental health partnerships

The project developed five local 'hubs' in different cities in England, forming partnerships between universities, the NHS and students' unions in each city to improve mental health care for students, connected through a National Learning Collaborative.

Project partners:

  • University of Bristol
  • University of Sheffield
  • University College London
  • Imperial College London
  • University of Manchester
  • University of Liverpool
  • Universities UK
  • Student Minds
  • NHS England.

Evaluation

Read the final evaluation reports
Last updated 10 July 2023
10 July 2023
New resource added from University of Sussex
15 May 2023
New case study from University of Birmingham published: Enhancing student mental health through innovation and partnership
10 May 2023
Added a new resource from Newcastle University: Clinical governance for mental health services
13 October 2022
Final evaluation reports published
13 July 2022
Northumbria University suicide prevention and data analytics case study added
12 July 2022
Page restructure, and new resources and case studies published
17 August 2021
Information and contact details updated for funded projects
02 September 2020
Link added to the evaluation of the OfS Mental Health Challenge Competition
05 August 2020
Link added to the report on the impact of coronavirus on OfS Mental Health Challenge Competition

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