Home

Concerned about a student?

Welcome to Student Support & Case Management

campus building with flowers

Reasons to refer a student to SSCM:

  • Concern for a student鈥檚 mental health
  • Hospitalization (physical or mental health)
  • Suicidal ideation
  • Harm to self or others
  • Loss of a loved one
  • Family emergency
  • Food insecurity
  • Housing insecurity
  • Threatening behavior

SSCM may be able to support students with other extenuating circumstances as well. Call for more information:听
303-492-7348

campus nature

How to refer a student to SSCM:

Anyone can refer a student, including staff, parents, faculty, other students听or community members. Referrals can be made by completing the 听or by contacting us:

303-492-7348
sscm@colorado.edu

If there is an emergency or imminent threat which requires immediate consultation or response, you should consider calling 911.

Student Support Emergency Fund

Need financial assistance? The Student Support Emergency Fund (SSEF) is a stipend that can assist students during unanticipated events that might cause the student to pause or stop their educational goals.听Eligible students must be experiencing emergency circumstances, unanticipated circumstances or have a clear financial need for the stipend. Every situation is considered on a case-by-case basis.

Learn more and apply


Call 911 if there is an emergency or imminent threat.听
Student Support & Case Management is not an emergency service.听
The case manager and SSCM play a secondary role in emergency situations and should only be contacted after contacting emergency response personnel.

Student Support & Case Management is a non-confidential service. If you disclose that you or someone else has been impacted by sexual misconduct, protected-class discrimination or harassment, intimate partner violence, stalking听or related retaliation, we are required to share that information to the CU Office of Institutional Equity and Compliance (OIEC) for outreach regarding support and reporting options. You are not required to respond to OIEC. If you are in need of support, OIEC provides a list of resources, including confidential assistance. If you have questions before you want to submit this type of information, please contact the confidential Office of Victim Assistance (OVA).

Additionally, please note that the university takes disclosures around threat of harm to self or others seriously and when information of this nature is received, it will be shared with the appropriate offices to offer additional support and resources.