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Purpose

Student mental health and help-seeking are growing concerns in STEM higher education, yet evidence from North African counselling services remains limited. This study aims to examine whether field-of-study change between upper-secondary track and university discipline was associated with primary presenting need.

Design/methodology/approach

Anonymised routine records from 401 undergraduate service users at a Moroccan public faculty of science (2015–2018) were analysed using chi-square tests and binary logistic regression.

Findings

Academic/study-related concerns represented 74.8% of consultations and psychosocial/social-welfare/basic-needs concerns 25.2%. Field-of-study change was associated with lower adjusted odds of psychosocial/social-welfare/basic-needs presentation, indicating more academic/study-related concerns. Later year of study showed higher odds, especially in the gender-adjusted sensitivity analysis. Supporting analyses contextualised where field change was concentrated and found no significant alignment between scholarship status and baccalaureate distinction.

Originality/value

Routine educational-pathway information can help low-threshold counselling services interpret intake needs and organise guidance/referral pathways in underrepresented STEM settings.

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