An Essay · Public Health

The quiet we mistake for healing.

Why India's refusal to talk about mental illness is not resilience. It is a slow, polite form of harm dressed up in culture.

Topic Mental Health in India
Format Long-form Essay
Read ~6 minutes
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India worships a strange kind of silence. We applaud the father who never talks about his depression as if the silence itself were the medicine. We call the mother who runs a household on three hours of sleep "strong." We praise the student who breaks down after exams and call it "dedication" until the breakdown becomes permanent.

Calling silence strength does not cure anything. It just keeps the sick quiet, and a quiet sick person looks exactly like a well person from the outside. That is the trick the country has been playing on itself for a hundred years.

The myth of the strong family.

Most Indian families treat mental illness the way we once treated tuberculosis. Something shameful. Something to hide. Something that happens to "those people," not to us, and certainly not to a son who is studying for the IIT entrance or a daughter who is being married off next year.

The family is the first place a person learns that their pain is an embarrassment, and the last place they can go to for help.[1] A study by the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences found that more than 80% of people with a diagnosable mental health condition in India receive no treatment at all. Not because the treatments do not exist. Because the families refuse to look.

80%
of Indians with a diagnosable mental health condition receive no treatment. The largest treatment gap in the world for any major illness.
NIMHANS · National Mental Health Survey 2015-16
What families say
  • It is just a phase, she will grow out of it
  • He has everything, what is there to be sad about
  • Therapy is for crazy people and foreigners
  • Take him to the temple, not the doctor
  • What will the relatives say
What is actually happening
  • Depression is a chronic condition, not a mood
  • Suicide risk is highest in those who "have everything"
  • Therapy is evidence-based medicine, not a Western export
  • Prayer does not treat serotonin deficiency
  • Stigma is the leading cause of preventable death in this country

The quiet Indian is not at peace. The quiet Indian has not been given permission to be loud about being unwell.

From the essay

The access gap.

Even when an Indian family finally admits that something is wrong, there is often nowhere to go. The country has roughly 0.75 psychiatrists for every 100,000 people.[2] The WHO recommends a minimum of three. The states with the highest suicide rates, including Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, and Chhattisgarh, have the fewest.

Geography is the first diagnosis. If the help is in a different city, the help does not exist. The second diagnosis is money. A single private psychiatric consultation in a tier-1 city costs anywhere from Rs 1,500 to Rs 4,000. A full course of cognitive behavioural therapy costs more than many families earn in a month. Public district hospitals have psychiatrists, if they have them at all, in a single OPD running two days a week.

The data behind the access gap
0.75
psychiatrists per 100,000 people in India. The WHO recommends a minimum of three.
Indian Journal of Psychiatry · 2022
~70%
of the psychiatric workforce is concentrated in just 20 metropolitan cities serving roughly 30% of the population.
NIMHANS workforce study
12
clinical psychologists per million people. In high-income countries, the average is over 500.
Lancet Psychiatry · 2021
The pipeline our silence builds
1
The pain begins
Anxiety, low mood, intrusive thoughts, exhaustion. Common. Treatable. Invisible to the family.
2
The family refuses to look
"It is just stress." "You have food, shelter, a future. What is there to be sad about." The patient learns to perform being fine.
3
The window for early help closes
Six months pass. A year. The treatable becomes chronic. The patient stops asking for help because asking was punished.
4
A crisis forces the issue
A suicide attempt. A breakdown. A violent episode. The same family that refused to see a doctor now demands an emergency ward.
5
The headline writes itself
"Student dies by suicide after exam pressure." "Wife found dead after years of domestic violence." The country clutches its pearls, then closes the tab.

The youth problem.

Suicide is the leading cause of death among 15 to 29 year olds in India.[3] That single statistic should rewire how the country thinks about young people. It is not road accidents. It is not cancer. It is the quiet, in the room, alone.

Half a million Indians died by suicide in 2022. More than 100,000 of them were students. The age group with the most access to phones, the least access to therapy, and the most pressure to perform on an exam that will determine the rest of their lives.

The students we are losing are not weak. They are the ones who carried the weight the longest without a single adult asking them how heavy it was.

What we tell them

  • JEE, NEET, UPSC. Your worth is your rank
  • You have one life, do not waste it
  • Real students do not sleep eight hours
  • Struggle builds character, complaints do not
  • Boys do not cry, girls do not get angry

What we never teach

  • How to name a feeling out loud
  • That asking for help is a skill, not a weakness
  • How to sit with a friend in crisis
  • That failure on one exam is not failure at life
  • That their body and brain belong to them first

We are losing the best students in the country. Not to a virus. Not to a war. To a number on a results sheet they were never going to be defined by.

From the essay

The reckoning.

India is not a country with a mental health problem. It is a country with a public health problem dressed up in a culture problem. The numbers are not opinions. They are NCRB counts of bodies.

Treating mental illness as a medical condition, the way we treat diabetes or hypertension, is the cheapest, fastest, and most obvious intervention we have. We are choosing not to do it. The cost of building the workforce is real. The cost of not building it is 250,000 dead Indians a year, with the next ten years on track to be worse.

2.3L
Indians died by suicide in 2022, the highest figure ever recorded by the NCRB. The student suicide rate has climbed every year for the past decade. We are not imagining the headlines. They are getting worse.
NCRB · Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India 2022
What mental health care actually is
01
A public health system
Not a luxury for the rich. A district-level psychiatrist in every district, a counsellor in every school, free at the point of use.
02
A literacy campaign
Teaches a generation to name a feeling, recognise a crisis, and reach for a phone number instead of a temple. Prevention is cheaper than a funeral.
03
A mass layoff of shame
Builds families, classrooms, and workplaces that let a person say "I am not okay" without losing their job, their marriage, or their relatives' respect.

Either we have the conversation we have been postponing for a century, or we keep reading the names in the newspaper.

The choice in front of us
Sources & notes
[1]
National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS) -- National Mental Health Survey of India, 2015-16. Across 12 states, the weighted prevalence of any mental morbidity was 10.6%. The treatment gap for common mental disorders ranged from 28% in Manipur to 83.6% in Madhya Pradesh, with a national average above 70%. The follow-up 2019 review concluded that more than 80% of those who needed care did not receive it, citing stigma and lack of access as the principal barriers. Reported by The Hindu, The Wire, and the WHO South-East Asia regional office.
[2]
Indian Journal of Psychiatry (2022) and the Lancet Psychiatry Commission on Global Mental Health (2021). India has approximately 9,000 psychiatrists for a population of 1.4 billion, or roughly 0.75 per 100,000. The WHO's optimal threshold is 3 per 100,000. The clinical psychologist workforce is similarly thin at around 12 per million, compared with over 500 per million in high-income OECD countries. Geographic distribution is heavily skewed: roughly 70% of psychiatric professionals practice in 20 cities.
[3]
National Crime Records Bureau -- Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India 2022, and the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) Global Burden of Disease study 2021. India recorded 233,000 suicide deaths in NCRB 2022 (a figure many researchers consider an undercount; IHME estimates exceed 250,000). The 18-29 age group accounts for roughly 35% of all suicides. Student suicides, which NCRB tracks separately, crossed 13,000 in 2022, an all-time high. Suicide is the leading cause of death for Indians aged 15-29, ahead of road traffic injuries and tuberculosis.
[4]
iCall (TISS) helpline data, 2018-2023, and Vandrevala Foundation annual reports. iCall fielded over 60,000 counselling sessions in 2023. Top three presenting concerns: anxiety, depression, and relationship or family conflict. Over 70% of callers are between 18 and 30. The Vandrevala Foundation helpline (1-800-2333-330) operates 24/7 across multiple Indian languages, reflecting the demand outside English-speaking metros. Both helplines report a consistent year-on-year increase in call volume since 2020.
[5]
World Health Organization -- Mental Health Atlas 2020 and the WHO South-East Asia regional mental health report. Public spending on mental health in India is approximately 0.05% of the total health budget, compared with a global median of 2.1%. The WHO has repeatedly flagged the South-East Asia region, with India accounting for the bulk of the population, as carrying a disproportionate share of the global mental health burden relative to investment.
[6]
National Mental Health Policy of India (2014) and the Mental Healthcare Act, 2017. India enacted its first comprehensive mental health legislation in three decades with the 2017 Act, which decriminalised suicide, affirmed the right to access mental health care, and made it a duty of the state to provide services. The Act has been in force for nearly a decade. Implementation on the ground remains sparse, particularly in primary care, and the policy's targets for workforce expansion have not been met.