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Stressed postgraduates suffer sleep and eating problems

Many students are struggling with stress-related health problems after switch to postgraduate programmes, research suggests

Published on
July 3, 2018
Last updated
July 3, 2018
Insomniac

Insomnia, loss of appetite and chronic anxiety are among the problems frequently faced by postgraduate research students, a study suggests.

Amid growing concern over the mental health of postgraduate and doctoral students, staff at the University of the West of England revealed that a third of the postgraduate research students that they surveyed had reported a decline in mental health or general well-being since starting their studies.

Of those who reported an issue, sleep and diet were among the two most-cited problems, explained Helen Frisby, an officer at the university鈥檚 graduate school, who presented the findings at the UK Council for Graduate Education鈥檚 annual , which took place in Bristol聽from 2 to 3 July.

鈥淲hen we ran a qualitative analysis on the comments, the words 鈥榮leep鈥 and 鈥榝ood鈥 came up again and again,鈥 Dr Frisby told 探花视频.

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鈥淪ome students were having trouble sleeping and others said that they were sleeping too much, while many also said that they were 鈥榮truggling to switch off鈥.鈥

A high number of students also spoke about how their eating habits and diets had changed since becoming a postgraduate, said Dr Frisby. 鈥淪ome were eating a lot more and eating much less healthily, while others were eating a lot less,鈥 she explained.

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While Dr Frisby admitted that the results drew on a 鈥渟mall sample鈥 of just under 100 students, she said that they were broadly consistent with recent findings from other studies.

According to the , which collected responses from almost 58,000 students in the UK, 31 per cent of postgraduates said that they had consulted their supervisor regarding mental health at least once over the previous year, while 9 per cent had done so every few months.

Some of the symptoms of anxiety exhibited by postgraduates聽could be explained by the switch from more structured undergraduate courses to postgraduate programmes with fewer contact hours, said Dr Frisby.

鈥淏ecoming a researcher is about finding ways of working聽that suit you, so this is a process of transition where people are finding habits that work for them,鈥 she said.

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However, the results had led the University of the West of England to reassess its support for postgraduates by providing more resilience training, she said. 鈥淲e now hold workshops with the well-being service 鈥撀爓hich postgraduates often view as mainly for taught students 鈥 where we encourage students to talk about the emotional and intellectual challenges of their studies,鈥澛燼dded Dr Frisby.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (1)

Hmmm. This is concerning stuff. Certainly a societal pattern that should be explored. I am only entering my second year at University and this is, by all means, a terrifying prospectus of the potential future. I would say something needs to be done about this. Maybe we need to take a deeper look at our educational systems, providers, syllabus, and goals. Something is not working, and I suppose now you are aware and responsible for the solution. Good luck.

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