Major sports clubs in Bradford have signed up to give their star-power backing to our Check In With Your Mate suicide prevention campaign. Sporting Heros Bradford collage.jpg

Bradford Bulls, Keighley Cougars, Bradford City AFC and Yorkshire County Cricket will be using their wide reach to share the campaign - which aims to normalise conversations around mental health and suicide, particularly among men - with their fans and social media followers over the coming months. 

The ‘Check In With Your Mate’ campaign is an ongoing campaign - first launched in May 2022 - which has now been boosted by funding from Bradford Council's public health team to reach sporting fans across the city. 

The four professional sports clubs will be sharing the campaign's graphics and messages - available to everyone to download and use - on big screens, pitch-side banners and kits as well as articles in match day programmes and video interviews with players. 

The campaign uses has the webpage www.checkinwithyourmate.co.uk which offers advice on what to say to a friend who might be struggling as well as directing peopel to local specialist support services. 

Coun Sarah Ferriby, Bradford Council's executive member for healthy people and places, said: “Mental Health as we all know can hugely impact people’s lives and their families, being able to share or talk a situation through with someone about how we are feeling can make a difference.  I hope that working in partnership with local agencies across the district will allow us to highlight the fact that support is out there 24/7 whether that’s talking to a friend, work colleague or family members.”

Rose Dunlop, consultant in public health, said “Between 2019 and 2021 there have been 132 registered deaths from suicide in Bradford with 76% of these being males. I’m pleased that our district’s major sports teams have given their backing for this powerful campaign. For people who are struggling with mental health, being able to talk to someone about it can be an important first step to getting the help they need.

“With the grants that we’re issuing to the teams who have signed up, we can enable them to spread this message to their huge network of supporters, encouraging more people to ‘check in with their mates’ when it really matters”.

Jess Parker, programme manager for WY HCP’s suicide prevention programme, said: “Every suicide is one too many and has a catastrophic and rippling effect on those left behind. 

“We know that suicide rates tend to rise in times of economic downturn, and that a growing number of people are experiencing poverty and financial exclusion. We want to decrease rates further and have adopted a zero-suicide approach. We believe all suicides are preventable.

“It’s so important to just reach out and have those conversations with men – and women – at home, at work, in the community. It might just save a life.”