On the day Binsa tried to end her life, it took two hours for her cousin and sister-in-law to walk her to the emergency room in Dolakha, a remote, mountainous district of Nepal just east of Kathmandu.听
Binsa, whose name has been changed to protect her privacy, was 24 when her husband died in an accident. After her in-laws took away her young son to raise him in India, Binsa鈥檚 life felt empty and meaningless. When she reached the hospital, she met with doctors hired by the New York鈥撎齛nd Nepal-based nonprofit ,听who听referred her to its peer mental-health counselors, located just down the hall.
Every morning and afternoon, Sunita听Jirel,听a counselor who told Binsa鈥檚 story through a translator,听worked with Binsa听on calming techniques including deep breathing, meditation, and progressive muscle relaxation. With the help of another counselor, they addressed the reasons Binsa went to the hospital鈥攖rauma, anxiety, and suicidal ideation, among others鈥攁nd the ways she might begin improving her mental health. The counselors also recommended that doctors prescribe two medications for anxiety and depression. After three days, Jirel says, Binsa was well enough to return home. She came back in a week to follow up听and has returned every month or so for therapy sessions for听the past year and a half.
In Nepal, and home to only a of psychiatrists and psychologists, mental health care is vanishingly听rare. The Nepalese听government set aside roughly听听for all health care in 2019鈥攃ompared to the U.S. government鈥檚 health budget鈥攚ith less than 1听percent dedicated to mental health.
Yet psychological conditions afflict Nepalis at higher rates听compared with the rest of the world. Researchers analyzing several recent studies on mental health in Nepal for the scientific journal found that more than one-third of Nepalis experience some issues with mental wellness, including anxiety (28 percent) and depression (30 percent). In comparison, about 7 percent of people worldwide have听anxiety disorders, and an average 3.2 percent of men and 5.5 percent of women experience depression. Nepalis also have a 鈥渉igh burden鈥 of PTSD鈥攏early 听of the country suffers from the condition. In discussing these high rates, researchers pointed to a decade-long civil war that tore the country apart and a magnitude-7.8 earthquake that rattled it once more in 2015, as well as a lack of mental health care throughout the country.
The Nepalese听government set aside roughly $500 million听for all health care in 2019鈥攃ompared to the U.S. government鈥檚 $1.5 trillion health budget鈥攚ith less than 1听percent dedicated to mental health.
But despite the high prevalence of mental-health issues, there is still a stigma against seeking the appropriate听care in Nepal. 鈥淧eople with mental-health problems are generally poorly treated, pitied, and even despised in Nepal,鈥 says Kul Chandra Gautam, former assistant secretary-general of the United Nations and author of 听(he also formerly served听on Possible鈥檚 advisory committee). 鈥淭hey are often seen as a burden to families and are ostracized by their neighbors.鈥
Possible Health, which now has more than 350 employees, launched in 2008 with a focus on chronic diseases, malnutrition, and maternal and child health in Achham, a region hit hard by the civil war. It听later added mental health care, in 2016. Immediately after the 2015 earthquake, the nonprofit expanded primary-care offerings to another hospital, in Dolakha, where the majority of health-care facilities were damaged or destroyed by the quake. Although Possible always planned听to add听mental health care at the hospital, the earthquake made this need more urgent, and it听started offering services in 2017, shortly听before Binsa arrived.
According to Gautam, the nonprofit opened at a time when mental health in Nepal was still being听neglected. 鈥淚t is a completely unaddressed issue we have to conquer. We simply don鈥檛 have enough mental-health specialists in the country鈥攅ven in urban areas and major hospitals,鈥 he says. 鈥淢ental health has not been a government priority, given other pressing priorities.鈥
While the World Health Organization and other nonprofits recommend integrating mental health care into primary care, that often means听physicians听simply听prescribe medications for anxiety and depression. Possible鈥檚听model is unique for the country because it听offers psychosocial counseling under the same roof. And those counselors speak with psychiatrists every week about each case, to help them catch mistakes or听something they might have missed. No other program in Nepal does听that, says听Bibhav Acharya, a psychiatrist and cofounder of Possible.
There are only 54 psychiatrists and psychologists in the entire country, says Acharya, and many doctors in Nepal receive no psychiatric education at all.
Acharya says that听improved mental-health services have been a 鈥渟ilver lining鈥 of the 2015 earthquake, with the event听bringing international attention鈥攁nd some funding鈥攖o the gaps in Nepal鈥檚 health care. There are only 54 psychiatrists and psychologists in the entire听country, which has more than 28 million people, he says, and many doctors in Nepal at all. But experiencing the quake themselves helped improve the听doctors鈥 empathy. 鈥淭hey finally realized how scary it is to have anxiety, how scary it is to be traumatized, to witness death and loss,鈥 Acharya says. A crisis like the earthquake鈥攐r, before it, the Maoist civil war鈥攃an uncover previously hidden and untreated mental issues, he says.
Addressing mental health as part of overall health care makes it easier for patients to find relief and for Possible to听skirt around the difficulties associated with discussing mental-health problems in the country. For example, counselors avoid听talking outright about depression, which is still a taboo subject; instead, they focus on听symptoms, like sleeping problems or headaches. From there听the counselors can explore听treatment options听such as听therapy and medications.
Typically, the two Possible counselors in Dolakha each see between听seven to ten patients per听day. Peer counselors undergo a six-month psychosocial training, and they keep in close contact with a regional psychiatrist, calling every week to discuss each patient鈥檚 case. The psychiatrist visits every three months for training and observation, but both of Dolakha鈥檚 counselors are from the region, which is helpful to听understanding patients鈥 backgrounds and building trust.
In the future, Possible will train more community health workers, especially those able to go to patients鈥 homes and villages, to recognize and begin treating mental-health issues alongside physical issues. This year听it began operating a third hospital,听in Achham. 鈥淭he overall goal is to develop a blueprint for what remote health care delivery looks like,鈥 Acharya says.
The counselors continue to work with Binsa, who has changed dramatically from the day she checked into the hospital. 鈥淪he鈥檚 totally improved,鈥 Sunita Jirel says. Binsa still has not been able to see her son, but recently she was able to speak with him on the phone. At her most recent appointment, she told the counselors that she now has听a reason to keep living. 鈥淪he thinks that, no matter what the shortcomings are in her life, she will fight through them,鈥 Jirel says. 鈥淪he feels stronger.鈥