Tag: Mental Health

  • Major breakthrough: Ranchi institutes develop technique for detecting depression

    Express News Service

    RANCHI: In a major breakthrough in the field of mental health, the Central Institute of Psychiatry (CIP) and Birla Institute of Technology(BIT)-Mesra in Ranchi have developed a technique that can help detect if a person is suffering from depression. 

    It has been named Hybrid Depression Detection System, said Dr Nishant Goyal, Assistant Professor at CIP, who was involved in the project along with Dr Shalini Mahto and Dr Sanchita Paul of BIT-Mesra. They team had applied for patent of this innovation, which was granted on August 13.

    “We have developed a technique to detect depression through which electrical activity (waves) of the brain is captured and converted into algorithm based on machine learning. If this technology is fitted in a wearable device like a smart cap or a hat, the person wearing it can get a feedback whether he or she has any symptoms of depression or not,” said Dr Goyal. 

    On the basis of the findings of the device, a person can seek help from a psychiatrist before his/her condition gets worse, he added. 

    According to Dr Goyal, there are different equipment for finding out ailments in human body but there was no instrument for detecting the mental condition of a person.

    “We collected data of several patients and analysed them using artificial intelligence,” he added.Though the project started five years back, but it took two years to complete the analysis part, he said. 

    “There is a system called Electro Encephalogram (EEG), under which we record the waves of the brain through six channels located on it and apply machine learning techniques related to computer science through which it could be detected whether a person is in depression or not,” said Mahto, who is currently working at Amity University and had submitted her thesis on the subject to BIT-Mesra.

    On the basis of this technique, a device could be prepared which would alert a person that he/she is possibly in depression so that he may seek help on time, she added.  

    Pioneering tech gets a patent

    Though the technique is ready, it can be converted into a device only if any company comes forward and shows interest, said Dr Nish-ant Goyal, assistant professor at Central Institute of Psychia-try, who pioneered the technique jointly with  Dr Shalini Mahto and Dr Sanchita Paul of BIT-Mesra. They received a patent for their innovation on August 13.

  • Phone number tattoo reunites mentally-challenged teen from MP with his parents

    By PTI

    THANE: A mentally challenged teenage boy was reunited with his family members at Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh over 24 hours after he went missing thanks to the mobile phone number tattooed on one of his arms, a Railway Protection Force (RPF) official said here in Maharashtra on Sunday.

    The teenage boy was spotted loitering on a platform of the Dombivali railway station in the Thane district on Friday evening, he said.

    The boy told RPF personnel that his name was Ankit and he hailed from Jabalpur.

    During the investigation, the police noticed that a mobile phone number was tattooed on one of his arms, the official said.

    The RPF called on that mobile number.

    The call was attended by a woman who told police that her son Ankit Singh went missing on Thursday.

    The boy was reunited with his parents on Saturday night, the official said.

    He said the boy might have boarded an outstation train at the Jabalpur railway station and reached Thane.

  • Caregivers in crisis: COVID-19 pandemic begins to ebb but trauma persists

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Caregiving is never easy.

    And when it’s a pandemic and caregivers themselves are either unwell or at risk of contracting the infection, the stress and strain is not just compounded but also complicated in many different ways.

    As the devastating second wave of the Covid pandemic dips in several parts of the country, those tasked with looking after the ill, often spouses, children or parents, are still grappling with the physical, emotional and mental strain.

    In many cases, Covid patients were forced to turn caregivers for the more critical members of their family as the health infrastructure crumbled with no hospital beds, medicines or even life-saving oxygen.

    Notwithstanding their rising temperatures, and mind numbing head and body aches, for weeks on end they cooked and cleaned, fed their ‘patient’ and took them to the washroom.

    And most of all stayed alert in case things went south.

    “The biggest challenge of being a COVID-19 positive caregiver was staying sane in the chaos,” said 34-year-old Bhushan Shinde whose father Madhukar tested positive less than a week after him.

    The isolation due to the infectious nature of the disease and the fact that no friend or extended family could help only added to the burden.

    While both started with mild symptoms like low grade fever, cough and body ache, his 65-year-old father’s condition deteriorated soon after, said the Mumbai-based Bhushan.

    “Initially his CT score was in the mild category, but when it increased, we decided to get him hospitalised,” he said.

    The most stressful period was when he had to scramble for remdesivir injections, not just for his father’s treatment but also for his 83-year-old uncle and his cousin who too fell sick around the same time.

    Running around frantically at a time when his body needed complete rest did not help, he said.

    “With the whole rush for remdesivir, I had to keep aside my physical and mental condition and it took a toll on my body.”

    It’s been over two months since Covid panic took over the Shinde household, but the struggle is far from over.

    Bhushan and Madhukar are still dealing with the challenges of post Covid symptoms.

    When the going gets tough, COVID-19 specialist Suchin Bajaj recommends caregivers remember to take a break.

    “There are many cases of caregivers becoming patients, and patients becoming caregivers because they do not have a choice, and during the second wave, it was very common to see entire households getting infected.

    “The risks when you are taking care of a Covid patient and you are a Covid patient yourself is that you may exacerbate your disease. The complications may be much more. To minimize this risk, it is important to rest as much as possible,” said Bajaj, founder director of Ujala Cygnus Group Hospitals in Delhi.

    Many COVID-19 caregivers, because they are young, also have no experience at this job.

    With the suddenness of the pandemic, they did not have the time to prepare either.

    According to a study conducted in September-October 2020 by pharma giant Merck, 39 per cent Indian millennials surveyed took up caregiving roles during the pandemic for the first time.

    The trauma of dealing with the illness lasts much longer than the illness itself, said psychiatrist Jyoti Kapoor.

    “This has taken a toll on the psychological health of most caregivers with longer lasting symptoms similar to PTSD. There has been an increase in instances of acute stress reaction, panic attacks, psychosomatic manifestations and psychosis in Covid patients.”

    “One of my clients, a 26-year-old woman, continues to get palpitations even a month after she lost her father to COVID-19 on hearing the beeping sounds of the monitoring devices in hospitals,” said the psychiatrist.

    She added that the first steps towards dealing with such problems would be to acknowledge one’s vulnerability, and seek professional help.

    Mansi Arora* and her husband often talked about caregiving when their parents eventually got old.

    But COVID-19 hit like a “bomb”, said the 28-year-old with her father-in-law and mother-in-law getting infected within days of each other.

    “From just having fever, in less than five days they went into a state where we weren’t sure if they would make it,” she said.

    And then Mansi* and her husband also tested positive.

    The couple had a harrowing 20 days during which her father-in-law was first admitted in a Covid care centre in Delhi, and then moved to a hospital.

    While the Covid care centre had all the provisions, medicines, oxygen, food — it seemed to function as a self service facility even for patients who were dependent on oxygen.

    “We hadn’t slept in days, eating was a challenge with the loss of taste and smell, and our anxiety levels were shooting through the roof. But our health was not a priority at the time.”

    “My husband admitted himself at the centre too while I was travelling back and forth from our home getting supplies. During the two days my father-in-law was there, there was barely any medical assistance. We even dragged an oxygen cylinder weighing 100 kg by ourselves,” she said.

    What followed was a frantic search for a hospital bed and oxygen cylinders, and after several calls and help from a few friends, he was hospitalised.

    Kolkata-based Ravi Sharma*, who also tested positive along with his parents, said it was very difficult to see them struggle to walk even a few metres.

    “I am sure I could have helped them more, and made the process a little easier, if I wasn’t unwell myself,” the 25-year-old said.

    The pandemic also brought to the fore the challenge of isolating in most Indian homes that are small, the trauma of the disease and its aftermath straining the family fabric.

    Kolkata-based Shruti Purkait, 25, was the first to test positive in her family.

    She handled most of the work for her 57-year-old father and grandparents (above 80), so it was almost inevitable they would catch the virus.

    And they did.

    “Thankfully, none of us had to be hospitalised,” she said.

    There was enormous panic though.

    Her father, overcome with fear, turned to astrology and the stress within the household would often lead to squabbles, eventually hampering recovery.

    “Things became really stressful when my father started panicking about my grandparents and started directing his anger at us. He became superstitious and began relying on astrological factors rather than believing in medical science and logic,” Purkait said.

    According to Union Health Ministry data on Thursday, 3,91,981 people have lost their lives to Covid.

    Too many caregivers have lost their loved ones to this disease despite their best efforts, and doctors warn against blaming oneself, whatever the outcome.

    “Do not overdo things and remember that you are not Superman or Superwoman, and most of all remember that you are not to blame for it,” Bajaj said.

    (*names changed to protect identity)

  • Memories die hard: Patients recovering from Covid struggle to shake off hospital images

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: Crowded wards with scarcely a doctor or an attendant in sight, patients holding on to each other to go to washrooms so filthy they gagged and, most agonising, people around them dying.

    For Covid patients back now home, harrowing images from their hospital stay are the hurdles on their road to recovery.

    Over a year after the pandemic began and deeper into the second, deadlier wave, many of those who have been to Covid hell and back are unable to shake off the memories of their days in hospitals, leading to worries about PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) and other anxiety related problems, including insomnia.

    It’s a “numbing experience” for many COVID-19 survivors who come out from hospital, observed Dr Samir Parikh, director, Department of Mental Health and Behavioural Sciences, Fortis Healthcare, Gurgaon.

    Their days in hospital are seared into the memories of Covid patients who seem to be healing, but maybe only from the outside.

    “Hardly any doctor attended to us for the first two days. There were six of us — women and men — in the same COVID-19 ward. We had to throw empty plastic bottles out of the door to catch the staff’s attention. I watched at least three people die on the bed right across from mine,” a Delhi homemaker told PTI, requesting anonymity.

    The 57-year-old, who is slowly regaining her strength, spent five days at a government hospital in the city.

    Cases were spiking in the national capital and hospital beds were hard to come by when she was taken ill last month.

    With oxygen saturation levels falling, high fever and deteriorating HRCT chest values, she needed urgent hospitalisation and the family managed that with some difficulty.

    She recalled her hospital stay with a shudder.

    “There was no one to take us to the washroom and we, the patients, would hold each other’s hands and go to that very unhygienic toilet, which was down the hall and unisex.”

    The attendants, overburdened, exhausted and frustrated themselves, were often unhelpful.

    “When the old man right across from my bed would take off his oxygen mask repeatedly, the ward boy would shout at him and say ‘Uncle ji, this won’t affect us. So you can keep doing this’,” she recalled.

    Almost a month later, she still wonders what happened to the woman who was on the bed next to hers.

    As cases continue to rise and hospitals stay overburdened, sociologist Sanjay Srivastava said this is a pandemic that seems to have no answers, causing a general rise in “social anxiety, distrust and psychological instability”.

    There has also been a realisation about the fragile nature of what in India was always believed to be a strong idea, the state, the London-based academic added.

    “There is also a feeling of extreme psychological distress due to the seemingly mysterious nature of the virus, a mystery that none of the usual authorities — doctors, hospitals, the government — has any answers for,” Srivastava told PTI.

    The stories of continuing patient distress are many.

    Several patients said they couldn’t bathe for days in hospital because there was no water or use toilets that were clogged and dirty.

    Siva Shakthi, a student in Puducherry, sought an early discharge for her 57-year-old mother Alamelu from the Puducherry-based Indira Gandhi Medical College because of its unhygienic conditions.

    Her mother has co-morbidities such as heart issues and high blood pressure and she didn’t want to take a chance.

    “The hygiene was pretty bad. That’s why she had to come back in just three-four days. Both men and women had to use the same toilet. It was very disturbing,” Shakthi told PTI.

    “Medication was given but drips weren’t.

    You had to take care of yourself which is the case with a lot of hospitals in the country today,” she added.

    According to Parikh, the patient may experience a range of emotions while in treatment for multiple complications that may arise.

    “They are isolated so they might feel loneliness, being around sick people and perhaps seeing death around, anguish, pain, grief their family may also go through the same,” he explained.

    Some of these patients can get PTSD, Parikh said.

    “What can be done is to have a support system in place and ask them to express themselves openly every time they get worried. Be connected with people through messages, calls and video calls. When you’re back, don’t rush to work, or be over busy. Give time to self care,” he added.

    According to Parikh, some people will feel vulnerable for a few weeks after being discharged and expert intervention might be required.

    Distress cannot be quantified and should not be correlated with illness, Parikh emphasised.

    He also stressed on the need for support systems.

    “The difference between what we will be as a society six months down the lane post the wave is going to be in the nature of our support systems.”

    “If you’ve not felt isolated socially and felt supported by family, friends and colleagues, then on the other side of the pandemic, you will be standing comfortably,” Parikh said.

    Former Allahabad University chemistry professor Arun Srivastava is an example of “self care” and holistic healing.

    Srivastava, who had also tested positive for Covid, lost his wife Hemlata, also an academic, to the infection.

    But he has begun the process of picking up the threads of his life and has decided to complete a book series on the university’s Science department.

    “Both of us got admitted to a private hospital in Allahabad’s United Medicity on April 6. On the evening of April 8, they said they will refer her to SRM Hospital. We reached there the next day. I didn’t have any such symptoms then, but they kept my wife on oxygen (support)… there were some severe complications due to which she couldn’t make it,” Srivastava told PTI.

    “She was the driving force behind this series. I thought I won’t be able to write anymore. Then I decided I must complete the series to honour her memory,” he said.

    A Jaipur-based physician said frontline workers are also “worn out and frustrated” from working 24X7 for the past one year, but admitted to the many problems of an overburdened healthcare infrastructure.

    “No one attends you for hours. This includes both general and resourceful patients who have been admitted for COVID-19 treatment, be it in a government or a private hospital. Even if they do, the senior doctor seldom comes to see them.”

    “Many deaths occurred because patients were not attended on time. There is also a possibility the doctors will never examine the patients and only treat them on the basis of their reports.”

    The condition of toilets is often horrible, he added.

    Clearly, the trauma of Covid is not just about the infection.

    The mental scars also have to heal for patients to get back on their feet and resume life as it was before the pandemic struck.

  • Oprah Winfrey defends Prince Harry, Meghan Markle over criticism, says ‘privacy doesn’t mean silence’

    By ANI
    WASHINGTON: American talk show host and TV producer Oprah Winfrey in a recent conversation, stood up for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. The duo had in a tell-all interview with Winfrey made claims of racism and ignoring psychiatric needs against the British royal family.

    According to Fox News, in recent weeks, Harry and Meghan have been particularly vocal about their lives as members of the British royal family – a rarity for those close to the monarchy.

    In March, they made claims of racism and ignoring psychiatric needs in a bombshell tell-all interview with Winfrey.

    During a recent podcast episode, Harry criticised his father’s parenting and accused his family of turning a blind eye to pleas for help against public criticism in his series ‘The Me You Can’t See’.

    ALSO READ | Meghan Markle, Prince Harry planning home birth for second child: Report

    The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have been criticised over their public statements that are growing in frequency. It is also because of the fact that the two moved to California last year in an attempt to attain more privacy.

    Winfrey, however, isn’t having it and is standing up for her business partner and his wife Meghan.

    The 67-year-old author and talk show host said on the ‘Today’ show on Friday, “I ask for privacy and I’m talking all the time. I think being able to have a life that you are not intruded upon by photographers or people flying overhead or invading your life is what every person wants and deserves.”

    She said that critics of Harry’s vocalisation are “missing” the idea that he wants to maintain a modicum of privacy as a basic desire. “Privacy doesn’t mean silence,” she added.

    ‘The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks’ star further shared that Harry and Meghan “have not shared any regrets” with her over their tell-all interview.

    “I understood what had happened to them and I wanted the rest of the world to come away being able to answer the question: Why did they leave? And I think by the time that interview was done, people understood,” she explained.

    As reported by Fox News, Winfrey and Harry worked together closely to develop the Apple TV+ docuseries ‘The Me You Can’t See’. It features interviews from celebrities and normal people about their mental health struggles and how they are working to overcome them. 

    WATCH TRAILER HERE:

  • Rape at 19 led to a ‘total psychotic break’, says Lady Gaga

    By PTI
    LOS ANGELES: Lady Gaga says she got pregnant at 19 after being raped by a music producer early in her career, a trauma that triggered a “total psychotic break.”

    The singer-songwriter opened up about the ordeal on Oprah Winfrey and Prince Harry’s Apple TV+ show “The Me You Can’t See,” which focuses on mental health.

    Lady Gaga, whose hits include “Born This Way” and “Shallow,” recalled having a “total psychotic break” years after she was raped.

    “For a couple years, I was not the same girl,” she said.

    Gaga said she was later diagnosed with PTSD after going to the hospital for chronic pain.

    The Grammy and Oscar-winner said the producer kept her “locked way” in a studio and threatened to burn her music if she didn’t take off her clothes, The singer refused to name the producer, explaining she doesn’t “ever want to face that person again.”

    Gaga first publicly told Howard Stern in a 2014 interview that she had been raped by a producer 20 years older than her, saying it inspired her 2013 track “Swine.”

  • Manipur government calls for muting ambulance sirens amid Covid-19 anxiety

    By PTI
    IMPHAL: The Manipur government has called for muting sirens of ambulances in the state in a bid to reduce anxiety and panic amid the COVID-19 gloom, officials said.

    The state’s medical directorate, in a memorandum, urged chief medical officers, medical superintendents, staff of private hospitals and ambulance operators to “silence sirens as they are panicking people and causing social anxiety”.

    “Only if roads are blocked, sirens should be activated,” it added.

    The state government had earlier imposed curfew in the districts of Imphal West, Imphal East, Bishnupur, Ukhrul, Thoubal, Kakching and Churachandpur on May 8, which has been extended till May 28.

    Manipur on Tuesday reported 624 fresh COVID-19 cases, pushing the tally to 40,683.

    The death toll climbed to 612 with 20 more fatalities.

    ALSO WATCH:

  • Isolation hitting mental health of COVID-19 patients: Experts flag depression angle

    By PTI
    NAGPUR: Undergoing treatment in isolation without the presence of family members or loved ones can leave a negative impact on the mental health of COVID-19 patients as they may lose hope of recovering from the illness, medical experts feel.

    They say that the presence of family members and regular interaction with them should be made an integral part of the coronavirus treatment standards as it has a therapeutic effect on the patients.

    “Not permitting close family members to stay with or visit COVID-19 patients is cruel and inhumane, as infected persons often lose hope of recovering when they feel they are struggling alone,” said Dr Indrajit Khandekar of Mahatma Gandhi Institute of Medical Sciences (MGIMS) in Wardha.

    He said that relatives who wish to stay with their loved ones, who are suffering from coronavirus, should be allowed to do so by wearing masks.

    “The presence of close relatives and regular interaction of patients’ family with doctors and nurses should be an integral part of the treatment standards,” he said.

    Interacting with the loved ones can be extremely therapeutic for patients and can give them the desire to survive in most difficult situations, he said.

    Dr Khandekar further explained that some patients, who are unable to carry out their routine activities, such as eating, drinking and answering nature’s call, need constant help and moral support, which only a family member can give.

    It is not possible for healthcare workers to look after each and every patient personally and provide help 24/7, he said.

    Speaking about the point raised by Dr Khandekar, assistant professor of psychiatry at AIIMS Nagpur, Dr Sonakshi Jyrwa, said one needs to adopt a ‘balanced approach’ while treating COVID-19 patients.

    At AIIMS Nagpur, a team of mental health professionals screen all patients post admission, counsel and provide them moral and psychological support they need, while a dedicated team engages with their family, updates them about their clinical status and counsels them, she said.

    Such interventions have been found to be effective under present circumstances, she said.

    While in case of critical patients or those with high support needs, the hospital may permit caregivers who are infected with coronavirus, which includes family members with mild symptoms, to be admitted in the same ward, Dr Jyrwa said.

    Apart from this, the inherent risk of infection, besides the requirement of additional resources, such as PPE kits, and the training, monitoring and assistance of family members to ensure its effective use, in an overburdened healthcare system will be a challenge, she said.

    “Finding a balanced approach is the key. Every healthcare organisation must prepare policies that are patient/family-centric that does not strain and impede the effective functioning of hospitals during the pandemic,” Dr Jywra said.

    If you are having suicidal thoughts, or are worried about a friend or need emotional support, someone is always there to listen. Call AASRA’s 24×7 Helpline: +91-9820466726 for assistance.

  • Amid raging second COVID-19 wave, the elderly battle loneliness and anxiety

    By PTI
    NEW DELHI: For 72-year-old Rehana Sarin her two-bedroom flat in a Noida high-rise has been her “world” since her husband passed away 15 years ago, but she has never felt more lonely and secluded before as in the months following the coronavirus outbreak.

    “I have taken the vaccine, but I know I am still susceptible to the disease. The way the coronavirus is spreading, and in view of my age, I have kind of locked myself in my flat. Earlier too, I was not going out much,” said Sarin.

    Dependent on her neighbours and friends for her groceries, medicines and other requirements, she asked,”How long can I be dependent on them like this.”

    “My husband left me a two-bedroom apartment which has been my world ever since he passed away. I have a good neighbourhood in which I have friends, their children and grandchildren. But I cannot be dependent on them all the time for essentials,” said Sarin, who feels more anxious by the day as cases rise across the country.

    On Sunday, health ministry data showed, a record single-day rise of 2,61, 500 cases.

    The data for Uttar Pradesh’s Gautam Budh Nagar district, in which Noida falls, on Saturday showed 402 new cases.

    The COVID-19 pandemic has been particularly difficult for people like Sarin who have been living independently and are elderly.

    Besides being highly susceptible to the virus, their old age has also made it difficult for them to commute and socialise, adding to their loneliness and anxiety.

    “Though I manage to get essential items, it is the loneliness and anxiety that has been really bothering me,” said Sarin, who became eligible for anti-coronavirus vaccination last month after the health ministry said people aged 45 and above account for about 88 per cent of all COVID-19 deaths in India making them the most vulnerable section of society.

    The septuagenarian said, “I am not very tech savvy but I learnt to buy basic items online.”

    However, she said she fears that those delivering her order could be a carrier of the virus.

    “Even delivery of essential items makes me anxious,” Sarin said.

    According to NGOs, there are around 25 million elderly who live independently in India.

    The situation for elderly couples is no different from those staying alone, and Rajesh Singh, 66, who has been living with his 61-year-old wife Sudha in west Delhi, said, “It feels like our life stopped in 2020.”

    “We try our best not to step out, and whenever we have to, we take proper precautions, but (since last year) it has been very depressing. After the first wave ( of the coronavirus) subsided, we thought normalcy will return in some time but now with the second wave there seems to be no end in sight,” said Singh, whose children stay abroad.

    Sudha said despite all precautions she fears that they will contract the infection.

    “The very thought has been giving me sleepless nights. Moreover, we are at such an age that we need regular health check-ups but that has been very difficult too. The coronavirus pandemic feels like being caught in an endless cycle of despair,” she said.

    Archana Sinha, 65, a resident of Mayur Vihar in Delhi, said she hardly speaks to anyone.

    “It is after 3-4 days that I am speaking to someone. I have been living alone since 2010 but have never felt this lonely,” said Sinha, who has been living alone since her mother passed away.

    “Before the coronavirus, I had a good support system of friends and neighbours but now we are scared to meet. We used to talk over phone but that also gradually reduced,” she said.

    Sinha said her old age and co-morbidities make her highly vulnerable to the infection and for that she got vaccinated.

    “But the fear of COVID still remains and more than that it is the gloominess all around that has been daunting. It feels like people of our age now have nothing to look forward to,” she said.

    NGOs working with the elderly said a lot of senior citizens especially those living alone have been battling depression, anxiety and a sense of abandonment since the onset of COVID-19 and the situation worsened during the second wave.

    Himanshu Rath, founder chairman of Agewell Foundation, said about 25 million old people live alone in India and a larger number of them are women who are widows.

    Rath said mental health of old people is a bigger issue during the coronavirus pandemic.

    “Old people have invested a lifetime into their present lives and they feel that now that I have retired and will live comfortably, but now corona has hit them,” he said.

    “They first thought that it is getting over but now it has come back in a big way so now every old person is thinking that the world is coming to an end and all their dreams of the last 60-70 years are crashing down which is leading to a sense of depression and anxiety and abandonment,” Rath said.

    He said that another problem is that all of them are now extremely concerned about their children too, “thinking what will happen to them in view of the pandemic”.

    “They are also worried for their grandchildren who are very young, so they worry a lot. This applies more sharply to those living all alone, they are more desperate because they have no one to communicate with,” he told PTI.

    Rohit Prasad, CEO, Helpage, said there is a need for having a very specific approach towards elderly who are living alone and the government has got the system going but the last mile organisation support is what matters.

    “Even during the COVID relief phase the civil rights organisations came for that connection (last mile). On our helpline, we are getting many calls just to understand things and the biggest fear is that if something happens, who will take care of me,” he said.

  • Bengal couple will drive to Central Asian nations for raising mental health awareness

    By PTI
    KOLKATA: Around three years after travelling to 32 countries in a car to make people aware of pain management, a couple of West Bengal are set to drive to four countries of Central Asia for raising awareness on mental health.

    Dr Debanjali Roy and her entrepreneur husband Koushik Roy said that they will visit Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, covering a distance of around 4,000 km, in May.

    Given the stressful life during the COVID era, stable mental health has become as important as any medicine, they said adding that a healthy mind allows a person to work productively, which in turn raises his or her contributions to society.

    “We are keen to spread the awareness of mental health across age groups.

    “Last time, we spread awareness about Safe Drive to a Pain-Free Life in association with West Bengal Government and travelled almost 45,000 km across 32 countries,” said Debanjali, an anesthesiologist and pain management specialist.

    In 2021, they plan to travel through the ancient and unexplored Silk Route, with the message of being stress-free and having sound mental health, said Koushik who is an entrepreneur.

    “In Kyrgyzstan, we will experience the nomads’ life, their food, their culture, and how to be happy against all odds,” she said. They have planned to cover the four countries in 18 days. In 2018, the couple visited 32 countries in Asia and Europe in over seven months by car.

    “In 2020, we all had to keep our wandering souls hibernated, as the world went through a transition unexpectedly. We all can hope that 2021 will be much better and safer,” Koushik said.