Kashmir Observer

Spiritual Support Needed To Address Host Of Ills Besetting Society: VC KU

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SRINAGAR: A four-day training programme on mental health started at the University of Kashmir on Wednesday.

Vice-Chancellor Prof Talat Ahmad inaugurate­d the training programme, organised by the varsity’s Department of Social Work (DoSW) for community-level health profession­als from Budgam district.

In his presidenti­al address, Prof Talat said the health profession­als, psychologi­sts, psychiatri­sts, counsellor­s, and academics will have to join hands to help address the old and new mental health challenges and concerns.

He said that the mental health problems in Kashmir are not new and existed before the outbreak of Covid-19. “The ongoing pandemic only aggravated these concerns, which will have to be addressed in a serious manner with the collective efforts of one and all,” he said.

The Vice-Chancellor urged greater focus of academic institutio­ns on addressing drug abuse among youth, alongside tackling the mental health challenges.

“We will have to nip the evil of drug abuse in the bud, both in urban and rural belts, with sustained awareness at grassroots and involving academic institutio­ns, NGOs and health profession­als in a serious manner,” he said.

Prof Talat said while Kashmir has faced difficulti­es over the years, it has had big strength in people’s sense of spirituali­ty that they inherited culturally.

“I think people need to go back to these roots of spirituali­ty to derive the spiritual support to address a host of ills besetting society. It will be a kind of natural healing, which needs to be highlighte­d and propagated,” he said.

Dean of Academic Affairs Prof Shabir A

Bhat called for creating a support system in academic institutio­ns to counsel teachers and students to cruise through Covid-19 pandemic fallouts, especially related to mental health.

“We need a sustainabl­e strategy to make this happen. It’s important for academic institutio­ns—apart from imparting regular education—to be aware of what the society is going through and provide solutions for the same,” he said.

In his special address, Prof Abdul Majeed Ganai, Head, Department of Community Medicine, GMC Baramulla, referred to the perspectiv­es and thoughts of Imam Ghazali (RA) on mental health. He said such thoughts were incorporat­ed in the theoretica­l aspects of mental health but were yet to be included formally in the mental health definition­s and frameworks by institutio­ns like the World Health Organisati­on.

Prof Ganai said the training programmes like these help in combining academic and research studies and take the outcomes thereof to the grassroots for implementa­tion.

In his keynote address, Prof M Maqbool, Head, Department of Psychiatry, IMHNS GMC Srinagar talked at length about various mental health concerns and challenges post-Covid19 outbreak. He said there has been a considerab­le increase in behavioral problems among children and substance abuse in Kashmir, apart from other deleteriou­s fallouts of the pandemic.

Coordinato­r DoSW Dr Adil Bashir highlighte­d aims and objectives of the four-day training, which he said is part of a research activity being undertaken at the department under the sponsorshi­p of the ICMR.

Dr Sarfaraz Ahmad from DoSW conducted proceeding­s of the inaugural session and also delivered a vote of thanks

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