Mental Wellness Hub

Recognizing Someone in Distress



Do you believe someone may need help?  You may be the first person to see signs that someone you know is in distress, or they may come to you specifically for help. Use this guide to familiarize yourself with common signs of distress, from mild to severe, and the steps you can take to offer assistance.

There are physical, behavioural, emotional and academic signs that indicate someone may be experiencing difficulty.  They may exhibit a few or many of these signs which could indicate their safety may be at immediate risk and require action.

Physical Indicators

  • Deterioration in physical appearance or personal hygiene
  • Excessive fatigue, exhaustion
  • Visible changes in weight; statements about changes in appetite or sleep
  • Noticeable cuts, bruises or burns
  • Frequent or chronic illness
  • Disorganized speech, rapid or slurred speech, confusion
  • Unusual inability to make eye contact

Behaviour and Emotional Indicators

  • Direct statements indicating distress, family problems or loss
  • Difficulty controlling emotions
  • Angry or hostile outbursts; yelling or aggressive comments
  • More withdrawn or animated than usual
  • Expressions of hopelessness or worthlessness; crying or tearfulness
  • Expressions of severe anxiety or irritability
  • Excessively demanding or dependent behaviour
  • Lack of response to outreach from course staff
  • Shakiness, tremors, fidgeting or pacing

Risk of Safety Indicators

  • Written or oral statements that mention despair, suicide or death
  • Severe hopelessness, helplessness, depression, social isolation and withdrawal
  • Statements to the effect the student is “going away for a long time.”
  • Written or oral expressions of a desire to injure or kill someone else

If someone is exhibiting any of these signs, on or off campus, and may pose an immediate danger to themselves, contact Campus Security  at (306) 585-4999 - 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Emergency Indicators

  • The person is physically or verbally aggressive toward her/himself, others, animals or property.
  • The person is unresponsive to the external environmental; she/he is: Incoherent or passed out.
  • Demonstrating a severe disturbance of cognitive, behavioural or emotional functioning.
  • Displaying disruptive behaviour that appears to be out of control.
  • The situation feels threatening or dangerous to you.
In these or other emergency situations ON campus:  Call Protective Services at "4999" from any UofR landline or (306) 585-4999 from any other mobile device - 24 hours a day, 7 days a week

In these or other emergency situations OFF campus:  Call 9-1-1 first and, if possible, call Campus Security (306) 585-4999 - 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.


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Other factors

  • Expressions of concern about a student by her/his peers, teaching assistant or other colleagues.
  • A hunch or gut-level reaction something is wrong.