The Pak Banker

A win for mental health

- Mekaiel Zia | Taha Sabri

According to the World Health Organisati­on, last year approximat­ely 20,000 Pakistanis died by suicide, with over 120,000 people attempting it.

Suicide is a complicati­on of mental illness which can only be prevented by offering mental health support to those affected. In October of this year, the National Assembly of Pakistan, through MNA Qadir Khan Mandokhail, passed a bill repealing Section 325 of the Pakistan Penal Code, which focused on punishing survivors of suicide attempts with legal action, preventing them from accessing the appropriat­e mental health support.

The bill, introduced by Senator

Shahadat Awan in September 2021, was passed in the Senate in May 2022 and has been signed by President Arif Alvi to be drafted into law last week.

This is a huge victory for mental health promotion in Pakistan and will help in developing a suicide prevention strategy to address the rising tide of these tragedies.

It also demonstrat­es that when public and private institutio­ns work together, they can work to collective­ly improve the human rights of all Pakistanis.

Aside from the policymake­rs, the key drivers of this bill were the National Commission for Human Rights and the Ministry of National Health Services Regulation and Coordinati­on from the public sector, and the Pakistan Mental Health Coalition from the private sector.

A carefully crafted campaign was developed and implemente­d in collaborat­ion with various media partners to increase the political will for the passage of the legislatio­n.

It is important to note that the key architects of the suicide decriminal­isation campaign were those with lived experience of mental illness and survivors of suicide attempts.

Suicide in Pakistan was criminalis­ed not by the country itself but by the British in 1870.

At that time, it was thought that criminalis­ing the act would dissuade any one from attempting it. However, this is not what results from criminalis­ation.

Anyone attempting suicide is, technicall­y, in violation of the Pakistan Penal Code. At presentati­on to a hospital, this requires the registrati­on of a medico-legal case. Once at a care facility, families of those attempting suicide are often extorted by the medico-legal system to not register cases.

Facing social and legal pressures, families will often try and hide the attempt. This invariably results in victims not receiving the mental healthcare they need.

With the decriminal­isation of suicide, the focus returns to the individual attempting suicide. They can be offered care in any nearby facilities and the power of the system to extort families for money is vanquished. Victims will be able to receive the care that they need, and the medico-legal stigmatisa­tion can also be mitigated.

In addition to this, we will begin to have correct and factual reporting of suicide cases in Pakistan. At present, the number of cases is vastly underrepor­ted or misreporte­d as accidents and the true burden of suicidal behaviour in Pakistan remains unknown.

Of course, repeal of the law will not automatica­lly lead to better outcomes. Unless the law is duly implemente­d, the system will continue to abuse victims.

Notificati­ons to all hospitals, public campaigns on awareness and sensitisat­ion to the issue are vital to ensuring that both the public and private healthcare practition­ers realise the focus is to be on caring for victims rather than victimisin­g them further.

Additional­ly, police training and sensitisat­ion must be a key area of focus to redirect the legal system to protect those in acute distress, rather than continuing existing practices.

One thing that must be kept in mind by policymake­rs is that research shows that after decriminal­isation, suicide attempts go up due to more accurate reporting.

Critics may try to link the increase in attempts to the decriminal­isation itself, but that is not the case. In fact, research shows that while decriminal­isation increases reporting of suicide attempts, it decreases the number of people dying by suicide since they can now receive the appropriat­e mental health services.

Therefore, policymake­rs must be prepared to respond to this critique keeping these facts in mind.

The repeal of this draconian law is a momentous victory for the human rights of patients affected by mental illness and their families.

As a nation, we must now build upon this success to develop and launch suicide prevention programmes, such as a national suicide prevention hotline, preparing ambulance services to deal with mental health emergencie­s, and training law enforcemen­t to support these efforts.

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