 With Mental Health Awareness Week taking place last month, some DC students decided to raise awareness by creating their own campaign. The video behind it was 30 Days to Selfie, so it's in conjunction with Mental Health Ireland. We wanted to raise awareness and kind of get a conversation going and obviously raise funds for Mental Health Ireland. So the 30 Days to Selfies campaign, you start off day one, you take your selfie of yourself doing something fun, whatever it is, something a bit different. You tag five friends and then you text M-H-I to 50-300 and then to donate four euro. Then for the next 29 days you just take your random selfies and we're kind of trying to get people to make sure that they don't, you know, filters and life is wonderful because, you know, life isn't always wonderful, so it's to highlight that and just to show, get a bit of a laugh, get a conversation going around mental health issues. DCU's disability and learning support services offer a range of support services for students with mental health issues as well as various other learning difficulties. The services include exam support, in-class support and working with occupational therapists to ensure students have fair access to their study. We provide a range of support to students who are registered in DCU with specific learning difficulties like dyslexia, with medical conditions, with neurological conditions, physical disabilities, mental health difficulties and anything that impacts on the student to be able to attend classes. They can contact us through our email, disability.service.dc.ie, call into us. We're here in CG28 in the Henry Gratton and also in room A102 on the St. Pat's campus. Call us, anything they feel either call in, drops an email or drop into us and have a chat. And we can have that initial chat if they're a bit, I'm not sure what you can do for me. I don't think there is anything or I'm not sure if I fall in your categories. Come in and have a chat with us and we can see if there's any support so we can offer them. We asked DCU students what they knew about these services. They're clearly like very important. I know like there's the doors as well like through the Henry Gratton where like you can push them like they open. But other than that I haven't really noticed many but that could just be me being a bit ignorant because I don't have to think about it so much. But I'd hope that they are there and that there's that accessibility for people who don't have same abilities that I am lucky enough to have. As far as I'm aware and I'm sure the general consensus is the same is that there's not nearly enough done in disability services in DCU. I was aware of the physical help out there for people but the mental help is great. I wasn't actually aware that there was any of these services but I do think it's important. It's a really good idea.