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4 Minutes Read

What the Search for Aryan Sharma Says About the Secret Side of Student Life


By: Willow Anderson

When Nights Out Turn Tragic: The Hidden Danger Claiming Student Lives

Aryan Sharma was just 20 when he disappeared after a night out in Loughborough last November. His mum's desperate plea—"Aryan, this is mummy. I love you. Please come home"—went viral across student group chats and Instagram stories. Three weeks later, his body was found in the River Soar. The inquest confirmed what campaigners have been warning about for years: he died from immersion in water while under the influence of alcohol.[hepi.ac]​


And honestly? This isn't an isolated tragedy. It's part of a pattern that's killing young people across the UK—one that nobody seems to talk about enough until it's too late.

The Stats That Should Terrify Every Fresher

Between 2016 and 2023, around 160 university students died by suicide each year in England and Wales—that's more than three every single week. But those numbers don't include accidental drownings, which research from the Royal Life Saving Society UK reveals are disturbingly common among students.ons+1

At least half of drowning victims aged 16-25 are students, and 45% of accidental drownings in this age group involve alcohol or drugs. Here's what makes it worse: 55% of people who drowned whilst intoxicated fell into the water accidentally, compared to just 36% of sober victims. Three-quarters were alone when it happened.[newsroom.shropshire.gov]​

The window of danger? Between 11pm and 5am—exactly when students are walking home from nights out.[newsroom.shropshire.gov]​

Why This Keeps Happening

Aryan was last seen on CCTV at 00:30 on Meadow Lane, walking towards Stanford-on-Soar in his distinctive black trench coat and shorts. His family said he often went for late-night walks, both in Loughborough and back home in London. It wasn't unusual behaviour for him.[hepi.ac]​

But here's the thing about alcohol: it doesn't just make you tipsy. It lowers your inhibitions, impairs your judgment, numbs your senses, limits muscle ability, and slows reaction times. When you factor in cold water shock—which is a serious risk even in warmer months—people under the influence literally cannot swim or self-rescue effectively.[newsroom.shropshire.gov]​

Lee Heard from RLSS UK put it bluntly: "We have seen tragic stories in the past where students have been excited for a new adventure in a new city and should have been enjoying their first few weeks at university but sadly their night did not end how it should have".[newsroom.shropshire.gov]​

The Mental Health Crisis Nobody Mentions

There's another dimension to student deaths that deserves attention. The ONS reported that student suicide rates peaked at 8.8 per 100,000 in 2019, and whilst they've dropped slightly to 6.0 per 100,000 in 2023, that's still 155 lives lost in a single year.fenews+1

Universities are drowning in demand for mental health support—literally five times the rate of enrolment growth—whilst 40% of counselling centres reported no budget increases or additional staff. Students are waiting weeks for appointments when they might be in crisis.[mhanational]​

Loughborough University does offer mental health support teams, wellbeing advisers, and counselling services. Students can call 01509 222765 or email StudentWellbeing@lboro.ac.uk for immediate crisis support. But how many students actually know these resources exist before it's too late?lboro.ac+1

What Actually Needs to Change

The "Don't Drink and Drown" campaign, launched in 2014 after multiple student deaths, targets freshers specifically because September sees spikes in alcohol-related drownings. But awareness campaigns alone aren't cutting it when alcohol-related drownings jumped 41% between 2016 and 2017.[ias.org]​

Here's what would actually help:

  • Universities with rivers or canals need better lighting and safe route signage, like Durham implemented after working with their local council[nationalwatersafety.org]​

  • More public rescue equipment positioned strategically along waterways[nationalwatersafety.org]​

  • Proper water safety education that goes beyond "don't drink near water" to practical survival skills

  • Mental health services that can actually accommodate demand without weeks-long waiting lists[mhanational]​

  • Student-led peer support programmes that catch warning signs before crisis point[mhanational]​

Be a Mate

Aryan's cousin Jagi Sawhney said something that stuck with me: "He is a loved grandson, son and uncle. Everyone is rallying around to try and find him". By the time everyone was rallying, it was already too late.[hepi.ac]​

The RLSS UK's message is simple: be a mate. Don't let your friends walk home alone after drinking, especially if there's water nearby. Know your route home that avoids rivers and canals. Check in on each other—not just on nights out, but generally.[newsroom.shropshire.gov]​

Aryan's 21st birthday came and went whilst his family searched. His sister asked about him every day. His parents hadn't slept in 11 nights. These aren't just statistics—they're people who should still be here, finishing degrees, annoying their flatmates, stressing about coursework.[hepi.ac]​

If you're struggling, Loughborough's Student Services is reachable 24/7 through their referral system. If your mate seems off, say something. If you're walking home past the River Soar after a night out, literally just take a different route.lboro.ac+1

Because nobody's mum should have to make a viral video begging their child to come home, not knowing they never will.


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03.11.2026

Living Well Together: Why Healthy Lifestyles in North West Leicestershire Start With Community, Not Perfection  

There’s a quiet myth that living well is about willpower. That if we just tried harder — ate less, moved more, said no to that second glass of wine — we’d somehow unlock a shinier, slimmer, more disciplined version of ourselves.But that isn’t how real life works. Not in your forties when hormones shift without permission. Not when you’re juggling work, ageing parents, teenagers, the weekly shop and a body that doesn’t bounce back like it once did. And certainly not when the world feels louder, faster and more demanding than ever.The truth is this: healthy lifestyles in North West Leicestershire aren’t built on perfection. They’re built on support.And thankfully, that support exists — in practical, grounded, no-nonsense ways — right here on our doorstep.Healthy Eating: Reclaiming the Everyday TableWe all know the basics. More vegetables. Fewer ultra-processed foods. Drink water. Eat fibre. But knowing something and living it consistently are two very different things.Healthy eating isn’t about Instagram-worthy smoothie bowls or cutting out entire food groups. It’s about building sustainable habits that work for real families in Coalville, Ashby, Castle Donington and the villages in between.A good diet, combined with regular movement, is one of the most powerful tools we have to protect long-term health. It supports heart health, regulates blood sugar, boosts energy levels and — crucially — stabilises mood. And in midlife especially, food becomes less about calories and more about nourishment.But here’s what often gets missed: food choices are emotional as well as practical. They are shaped by culture, income, time, stress and habit. 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Why So Many People in Leicestershire Aren't Moving Enough  

By: Gary AtkinsLet's be honest – most of us aren't getting enough exercise, and the numbers in Leicestershire prove it. We're not talking about becoming marathon runners here, just doing the bare minimum to keep ourselves healthy. And for disabled people like me, the barriers are even higher. The Reality CheckIn Leicester, 35.2% of adults are physically inactive – that means they're doing less than 30 minutes of physical activity per week. That's significantly worse than the England average of 25.8%. Only 52.9% of Leicester residents are managing the recommended 150 minutes a week.[leicester.gov]​Across Leicestershire county, things are slightly better but still not great. About 68.6% of adults are active, which sounds decent until you realise that means nearly a third aren't. And the trend's been going in the wrong direction for a long time – physical activity levels dropped significantly between 2017 and 2018.It's Worse If You're DisabledHere's what really gets me: 47.8% of disabled people in Leicester are physically inactive, compared to 32.8% of non-disabled people. Nationally, if you've got three or more impairments, your chances of being inactive shoot up to 50%.Why? Because most sports facilities and clubs weren't designed with us in mind. Getting into a building is one thing – actually participating in activities when you use a wheelchair, have limited mobility, or any other impairment is another challenge entirely.The Barriers Are RealNorth West Leicestershire Sport has set up an Inclusive Club Scheme because they've recognised the two biggest problems disabled people face:[nwlsport]​We don't know what's available because clubs don't communicate effectively with usWe worry we won't be good enough because clubs and coaches aren't prepared to make adaptationsThat's spot on. I can't tell you how many times I've turned up somewhere only to find the "accessible" facilities aren't actually accessible, or staff don't have a clue how to accommodate someone in a wheelchair.Who's Most AffectedThe inactivity problem hits certain groups harder:People aged 75+ are the most inactive (48.7% in Leicester)Asian communities have higher inactivity rates (13% doing less than 30 minutes weekly)Areas like Rushey Mead, Clarendon Park and Beaumont Leys in the east of Leicester have the highest concentrations of inactive adultsMen saw a 14% increase in inactivity between 2019/20 and 2020/21, compared to just 3% for women. That tells me blokes aren't admitting they need help or support to get active.What Needs to HappenThere are some decent programmes out there. Leicester Learning Disabilities Sports Club offers multi-sport sessions that are actually designed to be inclusive. The Inclusive Club Scheme is trying to get sports clubs to communicate better with disabled people and train coaches to make proper adaptations.But we need more of it, and it needs to be properly funded. Physical inactivity is linked to obesity, heart disease, diabetes – all the stuff that puts pressure on the NHS we were just talking about. Getting people moving isn't just about fitness, it's about preventing people from getting seriously ill down the line.My TakeThe recommended 150 minutes a week sounds like a lot, but it's just over 20 minutes a day. A decent walk, a swim, kicking a ball about with the kids – it doesn't have to be fancy gym sessions or expensive equipment.But for disabled people, we need facilities that are genuinely accessible, not just ticking boxes. We need staff who know how to adapt activities. And we need better information about what's actually available.Leicester and Leicestershire have got work to do. The numbers don't lie – too many people are sitting still, and the longer that continues, the worse it'll get for everyone's health.

02.19.2026

NHS Waiting Times in Leicestershire: Why It's Still Taking Too Long  

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