What lead me to make films on community mental health workers in India as a Senoir Fulbright-Nehru Fellow was the convergence of both professional and personal experiences.
It was not that long ago that the thought of mental health care in a global context was a topic very foreign to me. This spite of the fact that I am a doctor with experience in international health. Global mental health was just not discussed- either in my academic or social circles.
Then I read that the World Health Organization estimates that 450 million people around the globe have mental health issues- conditions such as autism, depression, dementia and many others. I wondered why we just never heard about these stories.
I experienced the silence of stigma in my own family. I grew up under the shadow of my dad’s schizophrenia. The impact of his illness was enormous and hiding it was devastating. I knew my story was not unique because as a physician working in clinics for the underserved, I saw time and again the impact of stigma on individuals and their families. I decided to do my small part in fighting this stigma but making a personal documentary around my relationship with my father. (Unlisted: A Story of Schizophrenia, on PBS)
When I eventually lost my dad to his illness, I realized I needed to fight the silence at a bigger level.
I packed up my video camera and started traveling looking for personal stories in China, France, the US, Africa, and India. The stigma was so great that it was with much effort to find people willing to share their lives on film.
As part of my Fulbright I completed the film, Hidden Pictures which had it’s world premier through the US Embassy in Delhi, April 2013.
While making Hidden Pictures I was always on the look out for solutions to the silent epidemic of untreated mental illness. That quest led me to Dr. Vikram Patel and the Public Health Foundation of India. Dr. Patel is a world leader in global mental health who for years has been studying how lay people from Indian communities can be trained to provide basic mental health services.
I became passionate about understanding how such programs function. What were the community members trained to do? How widely were such approaches accepted?
I have now spent the past 8 months traveling to various NGOs in India to film these community mental health workers in action. I will make at least three short documentaries. Stepping in for Mental Health was recently completed. To know more about these films and Hidden Pictures, join the Hidden Pictures Film Facebook page. Also, visit, www.hiddenpicturesfilm.com