Metadata
Title
How to support another student
Category
international
UUID
b7140d92426d45ddaf2a0b64987293d2
Source URL
https://student.sussex.ac.uk/wellbeing/help/supporting-a-student
Parent URL
https://student.sussex.ac.uk/international/health/
Crawl Time
2026-03-20T04:29:42+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

How to support another student

Source: https://student.sussex.ac.uk/wellbeing/help/supporting-a-student Parent: https://student.sussex.ac.uk/international/health/

Find out how you can help another student so you can look out for each other.

Supporting another student

As students you are likely to be away from your families and support at home, so it’s important you look out for one another.

Sometimes you may notice that a friend is in distress or shows signs of having a problem.

You might be worried about getting involved and, although it’s important to try to be as kind and supportive of others as we can, it is right that you shouldn’t take too much responsibility on yourself. You can still show that you care.

Students will inevitably feel distressed at some point while at university but some may need professional help.

You may observe that someone:

Supporting someone in an emergency

If you’re with someone who needs medical help (such as after taking drugs) call an ambulance and tell the crew everything you know about the situation; it could save their life.

If you have any substances left over that the person took, hand them over to the crew as it may help. In most circumstances they won’t tell the police.

If you’re on campus call security, and they will call an ambulance for you and guide them onto campus. If you’re off-campus, call 999.

There are also things you can do to help someone who is having a non-emergency negative experience after using drugs.

How to be supportive for someone you know

It’s important to try to be as kind and supportive to others as we can, but if you’re worried about a friend it’s important to let someone know. Remember – it’s not your responsibility to fix their problems, but you can help them find support.

If you feel comfortable doing so, you should talk to them about your concerns.

Try to be sensitive – they may welcome the chance to open up or they may not want to talk about it.

Try not to give advice – listening attentively might be the best thing you can do for them.

To listen actively:

Contact us through My Sussex if you want further support.

Look After Your Mate Workshop

We regularly deliver the Student Minds Look After Your Mate workshop here at Sussex. The workshop gives students the skills to offer support to friends.

Details of upcoming workshops will be posted here.

See more from Getting help