The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa health department’s decision to place 32 psychologists in district headquarters hospitals marks a structural shift that should have come decades earlier, because a province shaped by conflict, floods and displacement now carries some of the highest rates of depression and trauma in the country. In several districts, between 25 and 34 per cent of people live with a mental health condition, most of them undiagnosed, and the new mental health desks are designed to screen patients and connect them to community workers and tertiary facilities. It is a necessary intervention, and a belated one.
The scale of the crisis is no longer arguable, with nearly four in ten Pakistanis estimated to face some form of mental illness and fewer than 0.2 psychiatrists available for every 100,000 people, leaving primary care systems without counsellors and schools without support structures. Estimates suggest that between 15 and 35 people die by suicide each day, with roughly 38 per cent living with depression and around 19,331 suicide deaths annually.
Mental health in Pakistan is shaped by the pressure of economic insecurity, the rigidity of social norms and the influence of belief systems that often recast illness as weakness rather than a condition requiring treatment. Between ten and sixteen per cent of adults experience anxiety or depression, while one to two per cent live with severe disorders, yet the country operates with only a few hundred psychiatrists. Public spending stands at about $9.31 per person against a recommended $60, and the gap is reinforced by stigma that drives families to conceal illness, redirect patients to spiritual intermediaries and delay clinical care until conditions worsen. Policy has remained largely reactive. Mental health barely appears in fiscal priorities, and the absence of a coordinated national framework has left provinces to improvise, even as experts continue to call for integration of screening into primary care, training of Lady Health Workers and the establishment of counselling units in educational institutions. The state must now move beyond symbolic initiatives, allocate sustained resources and reform medical training, because poverty, inequality and insecurity continue to generate the very conditions in which psychological distress deepens.
Practice on the ground tells a more complex story. Pakistani clinicians working in low-resource settings have adapted in ways that formal policy has yet to recognise, bringing families into therapy, working within spiritual frameworks and simplifying interventions to match local realities. These adjustments are often dismissed as compromises, though they reflect a form of applied knowledge that wealthier systems increasingly struggle to replicate in diverse societies.
Pakistan is not merely a recipient of global mental-health models; it has lessons to offer on family-based care, cultural adaptation and treatment under constraint. *