After a string of student deaths, Cambridge opens an inquiry
Cambridge University has opened an investigation into a string of student deaths, one of which has been confirmed to be suicide.
Five students at the prestigious 800-year-old university have died since March. Apart from the one confirmed suicide, four other deaths are suspected suicides, a university spokesperson, Matthew Norton, said.
After the death of the fourth student, in May, the university appointed a team to work with Britain’s National Health Service to investigate. University officials, citing the privacy of the students, have given out little information, but Norton said there appeared to be “no links among the reported cases.”
The fifth death was reported in June, after the inquiry began.
“It’s incredibly dressing for the whole of the university: Five student deaths since March, it’s tragic,” said professor Graham Virgo, Cambridge’s senior chancellor of education.
“We have been working since March with the friends in Cambridge, and working with staff as well, who have been on the front line and need to be properly supported during these really difficult circumstances,” Virgo said.
The university would not reveal the exact causes of death for the students.
Experts say that the act of suicide can often be impulsive and not easily ascribed to a specific cause. The coronavirus pandemic created conditions unlike anything mental health professionals have seen before, making causation even more difficult to determine.
In the United States, professors across the country have reported that since the pandemic began, college students have been underperforming and not attending class as regularly. But concerns about the emotional well-being of college students predate the coronavirus. A study released in June based on a survey of 350,000 students at nearly 400 campuses found that the mental health of college students across the United States has been on the decline since 2013.
“It’s extremely difficult — it’s horrendous,” said Claire Curran, who heads Survivors of Suicide, an aid group that has been working with the family of one of the Cambridge students. “These are not all confirmed cases, but each of them involve families and communities that need space and time and privacy to deal with the loss.”
University officials said they would expand the budget for suicide prevention about 10%. The additional resources, they said, will be used to cut waiting times and train a new team of advisers to “enable early identification of students in dress.” The extra money would also pay for more intensive training for university staff members to identify students at risk.
The deaths have rekindled a debate on the campus over how much the school should do to prevent suicide.
Ben Dalitz, who heads the student union at Cambridge, said the university had been asked the Department for Education to create a policy for suicide prevention the end of 2021. Dalitz, who participated in discussions about a new policy, said the university’s “senior leadership buckled under pressure” from the heads of Cambridge’s individual colleges to make the policy less vigorous.
One of the changes that came from the new review involved removing a requirement for all staff members to receive training in suicide prevention.
Now, Dalitz said, the student union is calling for “a really serious review process” that will “require transparency and the courage to look at every corner of the institution and see what has been done and whether nothing could have been done better.”
Virgo said Cambridge had “already been training staff on the front line” but admitted that now “we need to review that training to ensure that it’s the best it can possibly be.”
From 2018 to 2021, there were three confirmed cases of suicide at Cambridge, and one death in which suicide was suspected, according to data provided the university. More students are reaching out for help.
“It has been confirmed universities across the U.K. that there is a growth in the numbers of students using counseling and support services over a period of time,” said Virgo. “And we have certainly seen that at the University of Cambridge.”