Mental Health First Aid Meets Digital Safety

Youth Champions Tackle Cyber Harassment with Peer Support and Mental Health Training

August 15, 2025
Green background with a silhouette of a person pointing at a computer screen and a quote about online support.

Students trained in Mental Health First Aid are creating safer digital spaces, listening, supporting, and standing up against online harm.

©UNDP Bangladesh

As Bangladesh’s internet usage grows, so does the shadow of online harm. From cyberbullying to hate speech, young people—especially women and marginalized groups—often find themselves vulnerable, isolated, and unheard. In response, students from BRAC University and Kazi Nazrul Islam University are stepping up as changemakers.

With support from UNDP’s Partnerships for a Tolerant, Inclusive Bangladesh (PTIB) project and the ICT Division, 80 students were trained in Mental Health First Aid. They became part of their campus counselling networks, equipped to provide peer support for digital harassment and emotional distress.

The impact was profound. Within a year, counselling uptake increased eightfold—particularly among female students. These peer responders assisted 463 students facing cyber-related harassment. 152 were referred for professional counselling, and 40 serious cases were formally linked to the Bangladesh Police’s cybercrime unit, ensuring not just mental health care, but legal protection.

This initiative didn’t just improve campus mental health—it created a safety net for digital wellbeing. It helped destigmatize help-seeking behavior, fostered empathetic communities, and trained students to become digital defenders and mental health allies.

“When harm happens online, it often stays invisible. Now, students know there’s someone who will listen, understand, and help them take action—without judgment.”

By building resilience and institutional response mechanisms, youth-led mental health action is now at the frontline of digital safety in Bangladesh.

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When harm happens online, trained student responders are there to listen, support, and connect peers to the help they need—turning digital spaces into safe spaces.