Caring for our Minds

With only 3,000-4,000 psychiatrists in India, it's time to revolutionize the way we look at mental health care.

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With only 3,000-4,000 psychiatrists in India, it's time to revolutionize the way we look at mental health care.

The number of people living with depression globally has increased by over 18 per cent between 2005 and 2015, according to a recent WHO estimate. In this respect, the World Health Day focus on depression is most relevant. Leading mental health expert Dr Vikram Patel discusses the lens through which it is viewed in India.

We need more specialists

We have a shortage of specialists of every kind, not just psychiatrists. We have very few training opportunities, not least because the Medical Council of India has strangled specialist training, for example, by restricting training to medical colleges, even though most mental health care is dispensed outside their walls. Of the small number of psychiatrists we produce each year, a substantial number -- perhaps half -- emigrates, so there is a vast brain drain in psychiatry. In some developed countries, such as the US, Australia, Canada and Britain, there are more Indian psychiatrists per capita than those practising in India.

Also, a rounded psychiatrist would like to work in a team with other professionals, be able to offer psychotherapies and social interventions, and be based in a community setting. On the other hand, psychiatry practised in India is often in large mental hospitals or the private sector, which can be isolating. Ultimately, most psychiatrists end up becoming purely pill prescribers, which is only 30 per cent of what mental health care should actually comprise. Further, those who wish to pursue an academic career find that avenues are very limited and the research carried out is often of poor quality and out of context to the Indian reality.

Wanted: A community-based approach

We need to use the community worker approach to deliver psycho-social interventions, as research conducted by Sangath [co-founded by Patel, the NGO focuses on child development and mental health] has shown. We need to build skills in the primary care doctor to detect and treat m...

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