Press release

Leading psychiatrist calls for roll-out of lay counselling to tackle massive burden of harmful drinking and depression in India

Leading Indian psychiatrist Professor Vikram Patel has published two studies today in The Lancet1,2 that he argues provide strong evidence for the roll out of lay counselling services in primary care across India to tackle depression and harmful drinking.

5-minute read
5-minute read

The randomised control trials, funded by Wellcome and run in Goa, India by the NGO Sangath in partnership with the Government of Goa’s Directorate of Health Services, reveal that lay counselling provides results better than enhanced care from primary care physicians for harmful drinking and severe depression3. The studies also show the approach is cost-effective, and therefore viable to invest in and scale up4.

One third of the global burden of mental illness falls on India and China, more than all high-income countries combined. Yet in both countries less than 1% of the national healthcare budget is allocated to mental health care5.

The Government of India’s recent National Mental Health Survey has reported 1 in 20 adults are affected by depression and nearly 1 in 10 adult men are affected by harmful drinking. Together, the two disorders targeted in Professor Patel’s PREMIUM trials affect 65 million Indian adults at any given point in time. Yet, the treatment gap for both disorders is a staggering 85%6.

Professor Patel, winner of a 2016 Pardes Humanitarian Prize, and recognized by Time magazine in 2015 as one of the 100 Most Influential People in the World, is a pioneer of low-cost, effective treatments to tackle the vast unmet needs for care for people with mental health problems in India.

Using lay counsellors – who, like other community based workers, have no professional training in mental health, but have had two weeks of intensive training in delivering specific counselling treatments and receive continuing peer supervision to ensure quality of care – aims to address the lack of mental health professionals in India.

The treatment programmes were developed in collaboration with Professor Christopher Fairburn at the University of Oxford in the UK, and have the same theoretical foundation as evidence based psychological treatments used by mental health professionals in high income countries.    

Wellcome Principal Research Fellow Professor Patel, at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said: “The interventions are brief and crucially were both delivered by the same counsellor – mimicking the real world of primary care.

“We now have the proof that these treatments are both effective and cost-effective. The Indian Government can’t ignore the strong argument for the roll-out of lay counselling across India. I hope other low and middle income country governments will also see this as adding to the strong evidence for investment in psychological treatments delivered by non-specialist health workers.

“Several other investigators, including our own group in India, are evaluating such treatments for a range of other groups, from mothers to adolescents, making this area of research one of the most vibrant and productive directions in global mental health”

Dr Mary DeSilva, Head of Population, Environment and Health at Wellcome, a global charitable foundation which funded the studies, said:

“It is crucial that treatments being developed for low and middle income countries are cost-effective, contextually appropriate and can easily work on the ground in settings where resources are scarce.

“These robust studies prove there are cost-effective solutions to the shortage of trained mental health specialists in low resource settings. They also provide food for thought for high income countries, where, despite their affluence, mental health service provision is frequently sub-optimal, and people with depression and alcohol dependency often don't get the support they need.”

Anyone wishing to learn how to deliver the treatments developed by the team can access the online training sites7. There is also a documentary describing the trials available online8.

Professor Patel is the co-founder of Sangath, a non-governmental organisation in Goa which works closely with Professor Patel’s academic institutions – the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and the Public Health Foundation of India.