Why mental health is a big monster in campuses
Health Opinion
By
Ochekit Giovanni
| Mar 18, 2026
Mental health is a common crisis among university students, but people don’t speak about it. It involves our mood, stress levels, handling challenges and ability to focus. Sometimes we may face trouble sleeping, constant anxiety, depression, or even lose interest in things. None of these are not weaknesses, but they all arise due to pressure.
From strict deadlines and exams, feeling lonely and money troubles sometimes due to delayed Helb, many of us face and quietly carry these challenges, thinking that others are moving on well. Unfortunately, many face the same challenges.
In some cases, culture in some ways fosters this issue of mental health. Culturally, we are taught to be tough, and this sometimes makes one endure suffering without sharing, as they may fear that their peers will judge them as weak. A comrade cannot admit struggle, as it feels like failing in this generation that prioritises resilience. Our families also add more to comrades by expecting more than one can do in the name of ‘what will people say.’
In recent cases, peer pressure has been the main cause because most students struggle to fake lives and, in the end, are left with nothing, mostly Helb funds. Betting has also been common, and many students use the little they have, expecting more, but, in most cases, all goes in vain.
To curb this monster, we must understand that it starts with the self. Schools should create awareness events, stress workshops, and open talks with students.
READ MORE
Airtel takes on Safaricom with Sh5.6b data centre
Lokichar-Lamu crude pipeline plan still on, says Treasury
Employers warn of rising costs, urge Ruto to protect jobs
British Airways parent says Mideast war to hit annual profits
Mpesa drives growth as Safaricom hits record Sh99.7b profit
Kenya to spend nearly half of budget on debt servicing
KDC roots for creative economy, innovation and youth-led enterprise growth
Kenya, World Bank deepen irrigation push to boost food security
Campuses should also increase the number of counselors and sometimes schedule them around classes. Most students are suffering from mental health issues not because they want to but because of the lack to know.
University life is tough, but when you communicate, a solution can be found, and it’s not weakness but strength. If you’re suffering, communicate for help because you are not alone.
The writer is a student Laikipia University