Many rural residents still require to send the patients to shrines, where they may be chained, neglected and poorly looked after. Shrines offer draconian approach to mental illness. They offer them ancient rituals for healing the mental patients to take out the evil spirits. According to the local beliefs the mental illness is labeled as being possessed by an evil spirit known as "Jinn"It's assumed that the ones who could break the chains would be the only ones that can be healed in the shrine

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The curse of mental illness in Pakistan

Diego Ibarra Sánchez | Pakistan

Abandoned, chained, forgotten... Mental patients in Pakistan face the lack of resources to take care of them. Ignorance and stigma regard mental disorders. Mental health care facilities available for their use are very sparse.

In the past, the government of Pakistan has attempted to make progress in the area of mental health by introducing the Mental Health Ordinance on February 20, 2001. When this ordinance came into effect, The Lunacy Act of 1912, enacted by the colonial government, consequently stood repealed. However, the situation is still far from satisfactory, since psychiatric departments tend to be under staffed and to lack basic facilities. Chance has been slow
Mental patients in Pakistan live between divine and curse. While mental health treatment in Pakistan has improved in cities there are still not enough resources to take care of them.

There are no exact numbers for the mentally ill in Pakistan, due largely to the associated stigma, but some estimates put the figure at more than 14 million people, out of a population of some 160 million.

 Invisible conquecuences: 

http://www.diegoibarra.com/liveinchains_1.html

 Documentary photographer based in Pakistan

 web: www.diegoibarra.com

blog: http://diegoibarrasanchez.blogspot.com

e-mail: diego.ibarra.sanchez@gmail.com

Phone numbers

PAKISTAN: 00923219502700

SPAIN: 0034663059578

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