— Mental Health · Cover Story
The Future of Mental Health Education in India: From Stigma to Syllabus
As clinical psychologists are formally written into curricula and counselling cells become mandatory in central institutions, India’s slow turn toward emotional literacy is finally visible — if uneven.
AS
Dr. Anjali Sharma
Senior Editor · 20 May 2026 · 14 min read
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A counselling room at a state-run secondary school in Pune. Cells like this became mandatory in 2024. Photo: Image Placeholder
For nearly a decade, the conversation about adolescent mental health in India circled the same four words: stress, pressure, exams, parents. The interventions never went much further. A poster in a school corridor. A 90-minute “life skills” lecture once a term. A helpline number printed in the back of a textbook nobody read.
Something has shifted in the last two years. Not loudly — education in India rarely shifts loudly — but in measurable, structural ways. The UGC’s revised handbook for higher education institutions now treats psychological counselling as “a service to be staffed, audited and reported,” not a virtue to be aspired to. CBSE schools above a certain enrolment threshold are required to maintain at least one full-time counsellor. Three central universities now offer dedicated undergraduate programmes in applied psychology with explicit pathways into school counselling.
That is a different country from the one in which most Indian educators trained.
Why now?
The catalyst, depending on whom you ask, is either a generation of louder children or a generation of better-listening adults. Both are probably true. What is clearer is that the supporting infrastructure — psychometric tools translated into Indian languages, trained counselling psychologists outside the metros, school administrators with budget lines — has finally caught up with intent.
Curriculum work moves slowly until it doesn’t. We have spent fifteen years convincing the system that this is real. Now the system is convinced.
That observation comes from Dr. Vidya Krishnan, who heads the counselling psychology programme at the University of Hyderabad. Her department has tripled in size since 2022. The applications, she notes, are increasingly from students whose first language is not English — the demographic that elite Indian psychology programmes traditionally underserved.
The four-pillar shift
Educators tracking the change describe it in four parts:
- Curriculum: Mental health literacy is now embedded in the social studies and biology syllabi from class 6 onwards in several state boards. The framing has moved from “awareness” to “competence.”
- Counselling: Cells with paid, qualified staff — not volunteers — are now mandated. Compliance is partial. Enforcement is improving.
- Training: Pre-service teacher education includes formal modules on child psychology. In-service training programmes now require a refresher.
- Research: The number of peer-reviewed Indian papers on adolescent mental health has roughly quadrupled in five years.
None of these four pillars is yet load-bearing on its own. Together, they are beginning to function as a system.
“Mental health education has stopped being a campaign and started being a curriculum. That is the difference, and that is everything.”— Dr. Vidya Krishnan, University of Hyderabad
What is still missing
The honest answer is: a lot. Rural schools remain dramatically under-resourced. Counselling cells in private institutions vary from genuinely useful to performative. Many state boards are still working off a 2016 framework that pre-dates much of the recent research. The number of qualified school counsellors per 1,000 students is roughly one-tenth of what international guidelines recommend.
And underneath the structural questions sits a cultural one: many Indian families are still reluctant to take the help that is now, finally, on offer. The infrastructure is moving faster than the conversation around it.
Where this goes next
Three things to watch in the coming year. First, the UGC’s outcomes-based audit of counselling cells in central universities — the first time the service is being measured against impact, not existence. Second, the rollout of mental health literacy modules in Hindi, Tamil, Bengali, Marathi and Kannada at the state board level. Third, whether private universities, which have led on visibility, follow on substance.
None of this is a story about a problem being solved. It is a story about a problem being taken seriously, for the first time, at scale. That is not the same thing — but in education policy, it is rarely a small thing either.
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