THIS is with reference to the article ‘Decolonising mental health’ (Feb 9), which highlighted the conditions that produce distress. One fundamental question — ‘are we addressing the roots of distress or merely managing its symptoms?’ — begs serious attention. There are two treatment models operative in Pakistan; psychiatry and psychotherapy. The first is primarily based on medication, while the second is based on healing the repressed wounds through personal change and growth. The rivalry between these two models tends to deny the patients the collaborative professional advice for rapid healing.

The deeper root causes of mental health challenges in our cultural context include inequalities that cause distress. The incidence of drug addiction is endemic in the dispossessed population, but it is also prevalent in the upper echelon of society.

In the middle and upper-middle classes, however, the broken interpersonal relationships are the major cause for mental health issues. For instance, in the primary parental caring system, a father — domineering, disciplinarian and an authoritarian in attitude — can lead to repressed mental conditions. If untreated, such conditions can retard organic growth of a chile. I have also witnessed a large number of cases where an overbearing mother ends up suppressing the genuine desire of the daughter for freedom to act independently and to avoid dependence.

The primary reason for this is the insecurity of the mother which compels her to protect the daughter from social vulnerabilities. Overall, in my experience the root cause of a large majority of the mental health cases is the consequence of shattered or unhealthy interpersonal relationships.

This is a serious challenge for integrated human development and a planned policy intervention is required from the govern-ment. Meanwhile, I feel a collaborative model of mental health, rather than an adversarial professional model, is needed in Pakistan.

Neither the psychiatry model of medicine nor the psychotherapy model can meet the challenge alone. In my professional view, the field of psychotherapeutic models needs government patronage to facilitate the needy ones in growing up as integrated personalities rather than fragmented ones.

Dr Zafar Iqbal Qureshi
Lahore

Published in Dawn, March 6th, 2026

Opinion

Geopolitical shift in ME

Geopolitical shift in ME

A prolonged conflict will have far-reaching implications for regional geopolitics, sharpening the divisions among Gulf countries that are directly affected by the tensions.

Editorial

Unyielding stances
Updated 13 May, 2026

Unyielding stances

Every day that passes without clarity on how and when the war will end introduces fresh intensity to the uncertainty roiling global markets and adds to the economic turmoil the world must bear because of it.
Gwadar rising?
13 May, 2026

Gwadar rising?

COULD the Middle East conflict prove to be a boon for the Gwadar port? Islamabad’s push to position Gwadar as a...
Locked in
13 May, 2026

Locked in

THE acquittal of as many as 74 PTI activists by a Peshawar court in a case pertaining to the May 2023 violence is a...
Bannu attack
Updated 12 May, 2026

Bannu attack

The security narrative and strategy of the KP government diverges considerably from the state’s position.
Cotton crisis
12 May, 2026

Cotton crisis

PAKISTAN’S cotton economy is once again facing a crisis that exposes the country’s flawed agricultural and...
Buddhist heritage
12 May, 2026

Buddhist heritage

THE revival of Buddhist chants at the ancient Dharmarajika Stupa in Taxila after nearly 1,500 years is much more ...