Wellbeing and built estate
The Office for Student’s (OfS) aim is to ensure that every student, whatever their background, has a fulfilling experience of higher education that enriches their lives and careers.
The Office for Student’s (OfS) aim is to ensure that every student, whatever their background, has a fulfilling experience of higher education that enriches their lives and careers. As noted in their 2020-2021 Business Plan, OfS recognises the significant importance of student wellbeing and protection by ensuring that every student has a positive experience during their time in higher education.
We have provided advice to many higher education institutions on the issues surrounding wellbeing, but often this advice is reactive, flowing from an issue that has arisen relating to a particular student. We thought that it would be interesting to explore some ideas which could help higher education institutions address the wellbeing of their student cohort through a series of articles. In the first of these articles, we look at the role of the built estate in improving student wellbeing and have taken the opportunity to invite LifeProven, a wellbeing property consultancy organisation that we have worked with on a number of projects, to share their experience and research in addressing the following question: Can the design of student accommodation protect and enhance Student health and wellbeing?
We hope that you will find the information presented as interesting and informative as we did when we first spoke to LifeProven.
Dominic Swift, Real Estate Partner, Browne Jacobson LLP.
Can the design of student accommodation protect and enhance student health and wellbeing?
The simple answer is yes. Strategic design and operational interventions integrated through the built environment can protect and enhance the health and wellbeing of the student population, ensuring your students have the greatest wellbeing whilst in your care. This article is dedicated to demonstrating how you can positively influence your students' wellbeing through the built environment.
Mental and physical health in the UK
In the UK, mental ill health is the single largest cause of disability, with one in four people likely to experience a diagnosable mental health condition each year. Further to this, physical inactivity is responsible for one in six deaths as the fourth greatest cause of ill health in the UK and is a leading contributor to rising levels of many long-term conditions such as obesity, diabetes and dementia.
Student mental and physical health
However, the student population is at a higher risk of developing mental health problems than the wider public, with many people first experiencing mental health problems when they attend college or university. Currently, one in four UK students experience a mental illness each year, caused by a variety and/or combination of factors such as making new social networks, developing new identities and being challenged intellectually and financially. The most common health conditions diagnosed in the student population annually are depression, anxiety and loneliness, with rising rates of self-harm, suicidal thoughts and substance misuse also recorded throughout the Covid-19 period.
HE-related mental and physical health challenges
In the 2019-20 academic year, there were nearly 2.5 million students enrolled in higher education across the UK. Based on demographic statistics, circa 625,000 students will battle a diagnosable mental health condition each year. This statistic simply cannot be ignored.
Mental and physical health in the built environment
Both mental and physical health are inextricably linked, so it is very important to acknowledge and positively influence both in unison to enhance the overall quality of life of an individual or group. Although mental and physical health issues can be treated, the NHS identifies preventing the onset of mental and physical health problems before they occur as the single most important healthcare solution for community quality of life.
This approach is called primary prevention and focuses on the ongoing promotion of healthy lifestyles.
As the UK general population spends the majority of its time inside building environments, the places we work, study and live can be designed, delivered and operated as primary prevention healthcare environments, with buildings providing the unique ability to directly and indirectly influence the daily lifestyle of the occupants who spend their time inside them.
Building environments influence key factors such as how much natural daylight someone receives, how safe people feel, how physically active they are, the quality of the air they breathe and even how socially connected they are, which are all fundamental components for having a good quality of life.
When executed correctly, a building environment can:
- mitigate the risk of mental and physical health issues from developing in the first place; and
- enhance the quality of life experienced by the occupant.
Colleges and universities already provide health and wellbeing support for the student population; however, there are increasing expectations for educational institutions to take a more proactive stance on wellbeing, proving how they actively consider the protection and enhancement of student and staff wellbeing when designing, developing and operating a campus and associated student accommodation environments. In fact, 67% of students in a recent LifeProven UK-wide student survey advised that they did not believe their accommodation improved their health and wellbeing, and this group scored 7% and two points lower on health and wellbeing scores respectively, both highly significant impacts.
Primary Prevention Student Accommodation: protecting and enhancing student quality of life
‘Primary Prevention Student Accommodation’ is a new industry term. However, there are a number of purpose-built student accommodation providers already adopting the Primary Prevention approach within their buildings using LifeProven’s data science analysis. The analysis informs how they design, apportion cost, build and manage their student accommodation building environments specifically to protect their student residents against the most common mental and physical health issues.
Underpinned by data, this strategic approach to population healthcare is the future of building design, ranking building elements in a hierarchical order of importance for their strength of influence on the residents’ health and wellbeing. This ensures the building elements most important for occupant health and wellbeing are prioritised through the design stage and are protected through the value engineering stages of a development.
For any higher education institutions or accommodation providers reading this, one of the first considerations when designing your student accommodation or negotiating a lease - and before anything is built - should be to understand how the design will influence your residents’ health and wellbeing during use.
To provide some real-world context to the positive benefits of understanding how different building elements can influence your student’s health and wellbeing before accommodation is built, LifeProven conducted data science analysis on 508 students across the UK. LifeProven investigated how the design and operation of their student accommodation influenced their health and wellbeing throughout the coronavirus pandemic. Students reported that when their accommodation performed positively against each of the below accommodation factors, their mental wellbeing and physical health were influenced by a certain amount. The breakdown for the 12 most influential factors is listed below:
Student accommodation factors vs health and wellbeing influence
Rank | Accommodation Factor | Wellbeing Influence | Health Influence |
1 | Amount of natural daylight | Higher by 11% | Higher by 5% |
2 | Interior Design | Higher by 10% | Higher by 5% |
3 | Promotes an active, healthy lifestyle | Higher by 10% | Higher by 4% |
4 | Makes me feel part of a community | Higher by 9% | Higher by 5% |
5 | Promotes positive social interaction | Higher by 8% | Higher by 4% |
6 | Internal air quality | Higher by 8% | Higher by 3% |
7 | Access to green space | Higher by 8% |
Higher by 2% |
8 | Has good internal temperature | Higher by 7% | Higher by 4% |
9 | Has little noise | Higher by 7% | Higher by 1% |
10 | Ability to personalise living space | Higher by 6% | Higher by 4% |
11 | Stay safe and secure | Higher by 5% | Higher by 3% |
12 | Close to local employment | Higher by 5% | Higher by 2% |
How can you apply the primary prevention approach to your student accommodation or HE campuses?
On a foundation of peer-reviewed academic research, LifeProven uses a world-leading data science process to comprehensively measure the impact of real estate on occupant health, wellbeing and quality of life, providing actionable data insights for better property performance. LifeProven works with funds, investors, developers, contractors and operators worldwide. For further information please contact LifeProven’s Co-Founder Adam Hinds.
Related expertise
You may be interested in...
Online Event
Wellbeing and financial considerations – practical solutions for challenging times
Legal Update
be connected - Spring 2023
Legal Update
Teacher strikes – lessons learnt so far
Opinion
Can toilet facilities amount to sex discrimination?
Legal Update
New support launched to manage school complaints
Legal Update
Cyber security and data breaches
Legal Update
#EdCon2023 virtual event hailed a success
Online Event
Flexible working in schools webinar
Legal Update
What does the new Provider Access Legislation mean for schools?
Legal Update
High Court dismisses Welsh RSE right to withdraw claim
Opinion
Term-time school worker entitled to national minimum wage for unworked basic hours
On-Demand
Industrial action essentials: what you need to know
Legal Update
Education Software Solutions Limited breaks against the CMA’s intervention: A victory for freedom and flexibility in contracting for MIS services
On-Demand
The Subsidy Control Act 2022. Putting the new regime into practice
Legal Update
Safeguarding at scale report published
Legal Update
Trade unions announce plans to re-ballot members
Legal Update
Widespread industrial action now confirmed for schools
Legal Update
Industrial action and minimum service levels within education
Opinion
Consultation on holiday entitlement – part-year and irregular workers
Guide
FAQs - converting to academy status
Guide
FAQs - becoming a sponsored academy
Guide
FAQs - becoming an academy sponsor
Guide
FAQs – single academy joining a MAT
Legal Update
EdCon2023 launch: Thursday 12 January
Legal Update
The importance of understanding the transitional provisions under the Electronic Communications Code
Legal Update
Biodiversity Net Gain: positive for nature and an opportunity for landowners
Legal Update
Discrimination comes of age
Guide
#EdCon2023: Access a range of expert guidance and resources at our FREE virtual conference
Legal Update
be prepared for the 2022-23 academic year
Legal Update
Teacher Pay Survey 2022
Legal Update
be connected newsletter for schools - Winter 2022
Guide
Good governance essential to avoid falling foul of the ESFA
There’s been little evidence of interventions or financial management reviews this year and it appears the Education and Skills Funding Agency (ESFA) has re-focussed on financial delivery. It’s also telling that there were no discernible changes to the reporting of financial irregularities in the Academies Trust Handbook 2022.
Legal Update
Children's commissioner recommendations for SEND reform
The Children’s Commissioner, Rachel De Souza, has recently published a report “Beyond the labels: a SEND system which works for every child, every time”, which she intends to sit alongside the DfE’s SEND Review (2019) and SEND Green Paper (2022) and which she hopes will put children’s voices at the heart of the government’s review of SEND system.
Legal Update
School complaint management - exploring a new way forward
There’s greater opportunity than ever for parents, carers and guardians to voice any concerns they have relating to their child’s education and for their concerns to be heard and to be taken seriously. While most staff in schools and academies are conscious of their legal duties relating to complaints management, many are struggling to cope with such a significant increase in the volume of complaints they must manage.
On-Demand
The UK's green agenda - the outcomes of COP27 and actions since COP26
Guide
Setting up a trading subsidiary – a guide for academy trusts
We’re pleased to collaborate with Lloyds Bank, who recently asked us and audit and risk specialists Crowe UK to offer guidance that academy trusts would find helpful when considering setting up a trading subsidiary.
Legal Update
DfE Trust Capacity Fund
The DfE has published new guidance and opened the application process for window two of the Trust Capacity Fund (TCaF) for 2022/2023, with a fund of £86m in trust capacity funding focused particularly on education investment areas.
Guide
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse - A guide for schools and trusts
The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse was established in March 2015. We now have its report. As you would expect with such a broad scope, the report is long and makes a number of far-reaching recommendations. In this article, Dai Durbridge highlights seven of the 20 recommendations, sets out how they could impact on schools and suggests what steps to take now.
Press Release
Law firm picks up record breaking sixth Education Investor Award
Browne Jacobson’s education team has been named as winner of the ‘Legal Advisors to Education Institutions’ category at the Education Investor Awards 2022 for a record sixth time.
Legal Update
Managed moves between schools
Since the new Suspensions and Exclusions Statutory Guidance was published, we have received a lot of questions about the use of managed moves. For the first time, the Statutory Guidance does explain what a managed move is, but in relatively broad terms and does not cover the mechanics of how a managed move should operate.