Content:
- Care as disability justice, dignity in mental health
- Charting an agenda on the right to health
Care as disability justice, dignity in mental health
Why is in News?
- A recent opinion piece by practitioners from The Banyan highlights:
- Deep gaps in India’s mental health-care model
- The limits of a purely biomedical and deficit-based approach
- The urgent need for a dignity, equity, and disability justice–centred framework
- The article gains policy relevance due to:
- Persistently high suicide burden
- 70–90% global mental health treatment gap
- Rising concerns over:
- Institutional abuse
- Homelessness
- Continuity of care failures
Relevance
GS-2: Governance, Constitution & Social Justice
- Right to mental health under Article 21 (Right to Life)
- State responsibility for:
- Rehabilitation
- Continuity of care
- Institutional accountability
- Failure of:
- Community mental health integration
- Aftercare & housing support
- Mental health as a rights-based welfare obligation, not charity
GS-3: Health Sector & Human Development
- India’s 70–90% treatment gap in mental health care
- Structural neglect:
- Severe shortage of psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers
- Over-reliance on:
- Tertiary hospitals
- Pharmacological solutions
- Weakness of:
- District Mental Health Programme (DMHP)
Practice Question
- Mental health is no longer merely a medical issue but a question of governance, dignity, and social justice.”Critically analyse.(250 Words)
What is meant by Mental Health & Psychological Disability?
Mental Health (WHO understanding)
- A state of:
- Emotional well-being
- Ability to handle stress
- Productive functioning
- Meaningful social participation
Psychosocial Disability
- Disability arising from:
- Mental illness plus
- Social barriers (stigma, exclusion, poverty, institutional neglect)
- Recognised under:
- Rights-based disability frameworks
- UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD)
Article’s Core Arguement
- Mental health suffering:
- Cannot be captured by statistics alone
- Requires attention to:
- Lived experience
- Trauma histories
- Social abandonment
- Present system:
- Focuses on “fixing the patient”
- Ignores:
- Broken families
- Violence
- Homelessness
- Caste, gender, class marginalisation
The article calls for:
A shift from clinical correction → dignity, justice, and relational care
Data Points
From National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) suicide data:
- ~33% suicides → Family problems
- ~10% suicides → Relational breakdowns
- Key emotional drivers (largely invisible in data):
- Shame
- Rejection
- Alienation
- Abandonment
Insight:
- India’s distress is relational and social, not just clinical.
Critical Gaps in Current Mental Health Care Model
Deficit Lens
- People seen as:
- “Maladaptive”
- “Unmanageable”
- Not as:
- Survivors of:
- Abuse
- Structural neglect
- Survivors of:
Over-medicalisation Bias
- Excess focus on:
- Neurotransmitters
- Diagnosis
- Pills
- Under-focus on:
- Meaning
- Purpose
- Belonging
- Human relationships
Continuity of Care Failure
- Many patients:
- Drop out
- Lose faith in institutions
- Slide into:
- Homelessness
- Chronic despair
Context Blindness
- Social causes not integrated:
- Housing insecurity
- Economic precarity
- Gender violence
- Caste exclusion
- Queer marginalisation
Intersectional Model
The article rejects single-cause explanations and supports overlapping causation:
| Domain | Examples |
| Biological | Neurotransmitters, inflammation |
| Psychological | Trauma, learned helplessness |
| Social | Isolation, poverty |
| Cultural | Loss of meaning systems |
| Political | Oppression, weak welfare |
| Historical | Intergenerational trauma, colonial legacy |
Key Point:
These act simultaneously, not in competition.
Disability Justice
Disability justice goes beyond:
- Hospital access
- Medication availability
It demands:
- Dignity
- Equity
- Inclusion
- Context-sensitive care
Care becomes:
- A relational process
- Not a transactional service
Reimagining Care
From Treatment → Meaningful Life
Shift from:
- “Symptom reduction”
To: - “What does this person need to live the life they want?”
From Linear Recovery → Non-linear Healing
- Accept:
- Setbacks
- Relapses
- Long-term dependence on support
From Institutional Control → Relational Justice
- Trust building
- Honest collaboration
- Dialogic care
From Specialist Monopoly → Lived Experience Practitioners
- Recognise:
- Peer supporters
- Community caregivers
- Provide:
- Training
- Remuneration
- Institutional backing
Combined Necessity
| Material Needs | Relational Needs |
| Housing | Belonging |
| Income | Trust |
| Medication | Purpose |
| Food | Identity |
The article asserts:
You cannot heal only with a house, and you cannot heal only with medicines.
Implications for Mental Health Education and Research
Education Must Train For:
- Sitting with uncertainty
- Navigating social complexity
- Celebrating small recovery wins
- Ethical discomfort handling
Research Must Shift Toward:
- Implementation science
- Micro-level care processes
- Transdisciplinary methods
- Real-world sensitive evidence
- Longitudinal trust-based outcomes
Conclusion
- India’s mental health crisis:
- Is not only a medical challenge
- It is a social, ethical, economic, and governance crisis
- True reform requires:
- Moving from clinical efficiency → moral responsibility
- From symptom control → dignified living
- Without addressing:
- Poverty
- Violence
- Social abandonment
- Discrimination
→ Mental health systems will remain fragmented and ineffective
Charting an agenda on the right to health
Why is in News?
- The National Convention on Health Rights (11–12 December 2025) is being held in New Delhi, timed between:
- Human Rights Day – Dec 10
- Universal Health Coverage (UHC) Day – Dec 12
- Organised by Jan Swasthya Abhiyan (JSA), a nationwide civil society coalition active in 20+ States.
- Around 400 public health professionals, activists, and community leaders will:
- Review lessons from COVID-19
- Oppose commercialisation and privatisation of health care
- Renew demands for Right to Health as a Fundamental Right
Relevance
GS-2: Governance, Constitution & Social Justice
- Right to Health under Article 21
- State vs Market in welfare provisioning
- Regulation of private health sector
- Federal health financing gaps
- Discrimination in service delivery
GS-3: Health, Economy & Human Development
- Public health expenditure crisis
- Insurance vs public provisioning
- Medicine price regulation
- Health workforce as economic infrastructure
- Climate & pollution as health risks
Practice Question
- India’s mental health crisis reflects the failure of community-based and continuity-driven care.Discuss with reference to homelessness, relapse, and disengagement from treatment. (250 Words)
What is Right to Health ?
Constitutional Status in India
- Not explicitly a Fundamental Right
- Interpreted under:
- Article 21 – Right to Life
- Strengthened through:
- Directive Principles:
- Article 38 – Social justice
- Article 39 – Health of workers
- Article 47 – Duty of State to improve public health
- Directive Principles:
International Basis
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) – Article 25
- International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) – Article 12
- Embedded in Universal Health Coverage (UHC) principle:
- Access to quality health services without financial hardship
Core Message of the Convention
“Health care for people, not for profits.”
The convention argues that:
- India’s health system is being pushed towards privatisation
- This threatens:
- Affordability
- Equity
- Universal access
- Health must be treated as:
- A public good
- Not a market commodity
Issue 1: PRIVATISATION & PUBLIC–PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS (PPPs)
What is happening?
- Medical colleges & public health facilities being:
- Handed over to private players
- Expansion of:
- PPP-based healthcare delivery
Why is it problematic?
- Weakens:
- Public hospitals
- Primary Health Centres (PHCs)
- Increases:
- Out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE)
- Converts:
- Patients → paying customers
Ground Resistance Movements
- Andhra Pradesh
- Karnataka
- Mumbai
- Madhya Pradesh
- Tribal Gujarat
Issue 2: UNREGULATED PRIVATE HEALTH SECTOR
- Private healthcare expansion driven by:
- Domestic & foreign investment
- Pro-corporate health policies
- Regulation remains weak despite:
- Clinical Establishments (Registration and Regulation) Act
Consequences for Patients
- Overcharging
- Unnecessary procedures (especially C-sections)
- Opaque pricing
- Violation of patient rights
Convention Demands
- Rate standardisation
- Transparent pricing
- Mandatory enforcement of:
- Charter of Patient’s Rights
- Accessible grievance redressal systems
Issue 3: CHRONIC UNDERFUNDING OF PUBLIC HEALTH
Current Public Health Spending
- Only ~2% of Union Budget allocated to health
- Annual per capita public health spending ≈ $25
- Among the lowest globally
Structural Outcome
- High Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE)
- Insurance-heavy model without:
- Strengthened public hospitals
Convention’s Key Critique
- Govt health insurance schemes:
- Claims > Reality
- Demand shifting to:
- Higher direct public spending
- Reduced OOPE
- Universal free public provisioning
Issue 4: JUSTICE FOR HEALTH WORKERS
COVID-19 Exposed:
- Dependence on:
- Doctors
- Nurses
- Paramedics
- Sanitation & support staff
Persistent Problems
- Low wages
- Insecure contracts
- No social security
- Unsafe working conditions
Convention Demand:
- Decent work, legal protection & workforce rights as a pillar of resilient health systems
Issue 5: ACCESS TO MEDICINES
Key Data
- Medicines = up to 50% of household medical spending
- >80% of medicines outside price control
Market Failures
- Irrational drug combinations
- Unethical marketing
- High retail mark-ups
Convention Proposals
- Stronger price regulation
- Remove GST on medicines
- Expand public sector drug manufacturing
- Enforce rational prescription norms
Issue 6: SOCIAL DISCRIMINATION IN HEALTH CARE
Special focus on:
- Dalits
- Adivasis
- Muslims
- LGBTQ+ persons
- Persons with disabilities
Problems:
- Denial of care
- Poor quality treatment
- Stigma & structural exclusion
Convention Lens:
Health is not just biological — it is deeply social and political
Issue 7: SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH
Health linked with:
- Food security
- Air & water pollution
- Climate change
- Housing
- Employment
Convention Approach:
- Inter-sectoral health governance
- “Health in All Policies” framework
Parliamentary Engagement
- Convention timed during:
- Winter Session of Parliament
- Delegates will engage directly with:
- Parliament of India
- Aim:
- Influence legislative debate on:
- Right to Health
- Public health financing
- Medical regulation
- Workforce laws
- Influence legislative debate on:
25 Years of Jan Swastya Abhiyan
- Active since 2000
- Worked across:
- Women’s movements
- Rural groups
- Science collectives
- Patient rights platforms
- Known for:
- Pro-people health advocacy
- Public sector defence
- Medicines access campaigns
Conclusion
- The National Convention on Health Rights, 2025 represents:
- A direct ideological challenge to health commercialisation
- A renewed civil society push for universal, publicly funded health care
- Central message:
India cannot achieve Universal Health Coverage through privatisation, insurance alone, or weak regulation. - The future of Indian health must rest on:
- Strong public systems
- Adequate government financing
- Workforce justice
- Medicine affordability
- Social inclusion
- Only then can health truly become a Fundamental Right in practice, not just in principle.


