Rural Mental Health Care in India: An Opportunity for Early Intervention Services

Rural Mental Health Care in India: An Opportunity for Early Intervention Services 

Chair: Rakesh K Chadda

Speakers: Rajiv Gupta2, Deepak Kumar3, Siddharth Arya4, Vinay Kumar5, Ritwik Gupta6 – On behalf of the Society for Rural Mental Health, India

Abstract 

Rural populations, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, have distinct socio-environmental and cultural contexts that shape health beliefs and help-seeking behaviors. Compared to urban areas, rural regions consistently report higher unmet needs for mental health care. This treatment gap is driven by multiple factors: low investment in mental health services, concentration of specialists in cities, entrenched stigma and discrimination, limited mental health literacy, and reliance on cultural or supernatural explanations of illness. Shifting family values and weakening traditional support systems have further exacerbated psychological vulnerabilities.

In India, where majority of people live in rural areas, making an effective framework for effective mental health delivery is a pressing public health priority. While the Mental Healthcare Act (MHCA), 2017 guarantees the right to accessible and affordable mental health care, its implementation must be grounded in rural realities, including infrastructural constraints and cultural barriers.

Promising solutions include digital interventions such as telepsychiatry and mobile-based platforms, which can overcome geographic barriers if adapted to local languages and contexts. Task-shifting approaches, where frontline health workers are trained to deliver basic psychosocial support, can also extend care to underserved populations. Moreover, integrating preventive psychiatry and early interventions within existing rural public health programs (maternal and child health, schools, and chronic disease services) can reduce long-term mental health burden. Addressing rural mental health inequities in India requires coordinated policies, investment in human resources, culturally sensitive care, and scalable innovations.

Reference:

Mathur R, Chawla N, Chadda RK. Mental health services in rural India: a big challenge still to be met. BJPsych Int. 2024 Nov;21(4):93-96.

Proposed speakers and subtopics 

Chair 

Rakesh K Chadda

Professor & Head, Department of Psychiatry, 

Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences, Faridabad 121002, India

President Elect, World Association of Social Psychiatry

Email: drrakeshchadda@gmail.com

Rural Mental Health care: Review of models across the settings

Rajiv Gupta

Director cum-CEO, Institute of Mental Health                                                          Pt. B.D.S University of Health Sciences, Rohtak 124001, India

Email: rajivguptain2003@yahoo.co.in

Embedding early intervention services into rural mental health care: Experiences from the District Mental Health Program

Deepak Kumar

Professor and Head, Deptt of Psychiatry and Medical Superintendent

Institute of Human Behaviour and Allied Sciences, Delhi 110095, India

Email: srivastav.deep@gmail.com

Innovative approaches for rural mental health care in India

Sidharth Arya

Associate Professor of Psychiatry

Institute of Mental Health, Pt. B.D.S University of Health Sciences, Rohtak India

Email: draryasid3188@gmail.com

Rural Mental Health in India: Expectations and challenges 

Vinay Kumar

Professor of Clinical Psychology

Institute of Mental Health, Pt. B.D.S University of Health Sciences, Rohtak India

Email: draryasid3188@gmail.com

A Trainee’s Perspective from the Rural Mental Health Clinics

Ritvik Gupta

Senior Resident in Psychiatry

Institute of Mental Health, Pt. B.D.S University of Health Sciences, Rohtak 124001 India

Email: ritvik17@gmail.com

Rakesh K Chadda

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