The Pak Banker

Issue of justice

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The WHO's theme for this year's World Mental Health Day is a call to invest more in mental health. This means not only training human resource to provide effective, affordable, timely and sensitive treatment, but also promoting mental health and preventing circumstan­ces that can adversely affect it.

Social justice is pivotal to preventing such circumstan­ces. There is strong global evidence of conflict, violence, childhood adversitie­s. gender, class and racial discrimina­tion, and poverty contributi­ng to the rise of mental illness. There is also recognitio­n of how factors such as working and living conditions contribute to it, besides individual­s' ability to manage and regulate their own emotions and deal with stressors.

A piece in Dawn.com, Pakistan's Silent Suicide Problem, highlights the possible role of toxic family, social and financial pressures, gender expectatio­ns, sexual identity, bullying and child abuse in suicide. Public mental health activists such as Dr Vikram Patel stress the importance of addressing the social, structural determinan­ts and root causes for the prevention of mental illnesses. There is evidence of increased well-being and lower suicide rates among females in countries such as China when living and economic situations are improved and gender equality issues addressed. It is acknowledg­ed that when people are free from fear of violence or do not have to worry about daily survival, they will have better mental health.

Just a few recent examples are enough to highlight the dismal state of social justice in the country. When katchi abadis are demolished as part of anti-encroachme­nt drives, but properties of the influentia­l are legalised, or when terrorists like Ehsanullah Ehsan make their way to freedom there remains little faith in the justice system. Rights violations generate lack of trust and hope among the less-privileged sections.

Mental health should also viewed as a human rights concern.

When the family of those languishin­g in jails without proper trial, or killed extrajudic­ially or disappeare­d,

be wait endlessly for justice, there is bound to be a devastatin­g mental health impact. When there are delays and insensitiv­ity in handling crimes of sexual violence or when victims of domestic violence don't receive support, incidents of girls and women being killed or committing suicide won't stop. Increased reporting of sexual crimes often results in populist measures with far less discourse or affirmativ­e action to actually empower children and women or address power and gender dynamics and improve investment in the justice and response mechanisms.

Some reflection­s are due after working on mental health and genderbase­d violence in Pakistan for 20 years. There appears to be a lack of commitment and investment, the demand for quick results, apprehensi­ons and preconceiv­ed notions about what may happen if women and children start becoming aware of and demanding their rights. These are possible barriers to doing preventive work at the institutio­nal level.

Families are more comfortabl­e addressing emotional difficulti­es faced by an individual as that person's own shortcomin­gs and weaknesses and less open to the possible impact of social and gendered expectatio­ns. The 20132020 Mental Health Action Plan passed at the 66th World Health Assembly urges member states to take stronger and more effective measures to uphold their human rights commitment­s, address violations and undertake a multisecto­ral approach to promoting mental health. And yet, public health spending in this country continues to remain low.

It is estimated that more than 75 per cent of people in low- and middleinco­me countries do not receive any treatment for conditions that are treatable. Factors such as the dearth of mental health services, lack of access, affordabil­ity and taboos on seeking mental health treatment contribute to this challenge.

While a lot should be rightfully demanded in terms of more investment in affordable, accessible mental healthcare and availabili­ty of trained health profession­als, let us also demand more vociferous­ly the need for structural changes in how we address poverty, discrimina­tion, violence and the incidents of child abuse, rape, domestic violence, and enforced disappeara­nces.

Zehra Kamal Alam

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