Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

‘It’s not anyone’s fault, it’s not a sin’

A 76yearold father, who quit his job to help his schizophre­nic daughter, says the lack of informatio­n about mental illness is the real culprit

- AMRIT BAKHSHY Bakhshy is president of SAA since 2010, and has authored a book on mental health and caregiving, which is available in English and Marathi. He is also on the Institutio­n Body of NIMHANS and chairperso­n of their Hospital Management Committee.

For the past 27 years, I have been a caregiver to my daughter Richa who lives with schizophre­nia, and over the past few years, to my wife, who recently had a recurrence of cancer. My wife, 72, four years younger than me, worked with a famous hotel chain. I worked in a bank in Mumbai. In the late 80s, we decided to send our teenage daughter to a boarding school in Dehradun.

As a child, Richa did not enjoy many things that her peers did. I never forced her to excel at any activity, but I encouraged her to learn horse-riding, Bharatnaty­am, and tennis. She did not get along with her teachers, and disliked any kind of physical display of affection. We could never imagine that these could be early signs of a mental condition. Anyone with schizophre­nia should never be sent away from their place of comfort. This, of course, we learnt much later.

In early 1991, while I was in my office at Mumbai’s World Trade Centre, I received a call from Richa’s boarding school that she had suffered a nervous breakdown. On reaching Dehradun, I saw that she looked disoriente­d and our conversati­on was erratic. A psychiatri­st misguided us by saying that this was an isolated incident and did not warrant medication.

After school, Richa got through to a prestigiou­s art school in Gujarat, but we brought her home soon after, as her condition had deteriorat­ed. We feared that she might harm herself or us. When she complained of being troubled by voices, a psychiatri­st diagnosed schizophre­nia, a mental condition marked with hallucinat­ions and delusions. My wife quit her job to become Richa’s full-time caregiver.

Richa refused to take the prescribed medication, so we would mix it in her food. Those were very difficult years for Richa and us. My neighbours feared that she would assault their children. Richa would often assault my wife and I. We hid all the kitchen knives. We also sealed our windows so that she would not be able to jump out of them. Addressing the stigma around mental illness is very important. I would try to explain to our neighbours and other family members that it was not Richa’s fault that she behaved in that manner. In fact, it was not anyone’s fault—not my wife’s, not mine. It’s not a sin to have a mental illness either. The fault, if one must find it, is in the lack of informatio­n available. If we had informatio­n about schizophre­nia when Richa’s illness was triggered, it would not have got chronic. .

In 1993, Time magazine wrote about a wonder drug which had a very high success rate in the treatment of schizophre­nia. It was not available in India, so I imported it from Switzerlan­d. It was costly— a strip cost Rs 7,000 and I had to pay import duty because it was not classified as a lifesaving drug. Her condition improved, but side effects included drowsiness and drooling. Around this time, Richa enrolled in another art school, but discontinu­ed her drug for a few months to try out alternativ­e treatments. This made her condition worse and she had to drop out. That’s why I always tell caregivers that they must never allow the person to stop a medicine or self-medicate, but follow their psychiatri­st’s advice alone.

In 2007, I quit my job to become a fulltime caregiver. We moved to Pune after I found out about a rehabilita­tion centre run by the Schizophre­nia Awareness Associatio­n (SAA), a not for profit organizati­on. I would take Richa to the SAA’S leafy campus to spend the day. Today, 42 patients of different mental illnesses, including schizophre­nia, bipolar disorder and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, visit the rehabilita­tion centre. They do a host of activities from gardening and artbased therapy to music and dance therapy. We also encourage fairly stable patients to hold sessions for others, for which they get paid. Richa teaches English and supervises the outdoor games session. The feeling that they can earn is vital to their recovery.

We were often told to get Richa married. This is terrible advice. Not only should one not marry without disclosing one’s condition, it is also a common misconcept­ion that marriage will help resolve the mental condition. Almost all the patients who come to the rehabilita­tion centre have no partners. One of the things we do for those who manifest strong sexual urge, is to hold sex therapy sessions for them, in consultati­on with their families, where our sex counsellor­s educate them about single/self sex. After all, mental illness does not make a person devoid of physical desire.

We now have a highly progressiv­e Mental Health Care Act. I have closely followed and participat­ed in deliberati­ons related to the drafting of the Mental Health Bill at various stages and was a member of the Expert Committee constitute­d by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare to draft the rules. The Act offers a host of treatment-related benefits which include free delivery of essential drugs, free legal aid and insurance. The Act’s provision for an advance directive and a nominated representa­tive create some practical difficulti­es for caregivers who are family members, but it is overwhelmi­ngly beneficial for persons with mental illness. It provides adequate representa­tion of caregivers and those who have experience­d mental illness in the central and state Mental Health Authoritie­s and District Review Boards. It also asks the state to open half way homes and create additional seats in medical colleges for mental health profession­als. It will not be an exaggerati­on to say that good days are ahead for the mental health sector. All caregivers worry about what will happen after they die. I have made a private trust to take care of Richa when my wife and I are not here. The trustees will ensure that Richa gets a steady income for as long as she is alive. After all of us are gone, the trust will be dissolved. The fixed assets will be donated to this organisati­on or any other organisati­on working for persons with mental illness, while the liquid assets will go to any organisati­on working for cancer patients.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: RAHUL KRISHNAN ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: RAHUL KRISHNAN
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