Millennium Post

Unable to meet therapists, added anxiety – How mental health patients are dealing with lockdown

- ABHINAY LAKSHMAN

NEW DELHI: Amidst the COVID-19 lockdown, people already diagnosed with mental health conditions have been among some of the hardest hit as a lot of their treatment is dependent on sharing a physical space with their doctors and therapists. Several mental health profession­als said that people with mental health conditions have been severely affected by the lockdown.

One doctor in Delhi NCR said that not being able to meet their doctors and therapists due to the lockdown is having an adverse effect on patients with anxiety and depressive disorders and people who are on the Autism spectrum.

"A lot of people on the spectrum often rely on a strict routine, which has been disturbed in the last few weeks," she said.

Another therapist based in Kolkata said that this was a crucial time for patients to be able to stay in touch with their doctors because "in usual times, whenever a patient feels disturbed they are able to visit their therapists and seek help". But she said the lockdown was resulting in patients having to settle for phone or video consultati­ons.

"It gets very difficult for us as therapists to treat our patients as well. A lot of our analysis also depends on physical and visual cues shown by the patient," a therapist based in Mumbai said, adding that patients often need to share a physical space with their doctors to feel that they are being heard.

Dr P Bhattachar­ya in Kolkata said that it is best for patients to maintain structure in their daily lives during these times and follow it as much as possible.

"In a lot of instances, we are unable to provide the required therapy to the patients through phones," she said. Other therapists also insisted on the need to follow a routine.

One psychologi­st in Delhi suggested, "Even if you are working from home, it is best if you follow a particular sleep schedule and wake up and dress for work to feel

like the daily routine is not as disrupted."

Moreover, Dr Poojashiva­m Jaitly, a mental health profession­al in Delhi NCR said that the COVID-19 crisis and the

lockdown had also increased the number of people who are at risk of developing anxiety and depression-related disorders.

"A lot of the times, people do not realise that they might be on the border of an anxiety disorder because their lives keep them extremely busy," she said, adding that the lockdown was resulting in more of these people developing mild forms of anxiety, panic and depression.

In addition, mental health profession­als said that many patients already suffering from anxiety and depression have what is known as "catastroph­ic" or "dichotomou­s" thinking.

In such situations, patients often think about extreme consequenc­es. "So, all the informatio­n about COVID19 wreaking havoc across the world, in a way, validates their thinking, which carried the potential for these patients to act out in disastrous ways," another therapist said.

Dr Jaitly added that the COVID-19 lockdown has also resulted in a spike in mood disorders among urban population­s, who are constantly thinking about how or whether the world will be able to recover from the pandemic.

"A lot of people are also having to think about losing jobs, losing investment­s and that is another thing that the urban population must come to terms with," she said.

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