Mental Health

Care Without Caring?

Pakistan is a trauma-exposed society, shaped by Partition, political instability, economic insecurity, terrorism, natural disasters, and chronic stress.

By Irfan Mustafa | June 2026


While I am not a healthcare professional, my engagement with Pakistan’s health sector has been indirect, through association with hospitals, conversations with clinicians, and involvement in institutional initiatives, particularly in mental health.
Mental health is a subject very close to my heart. For many decades, I have had meaningful encounters with issues related to mental health, both on a deeply personal level and in my professional and socio-entrepreneurial life.

On a personal level, I witnessed something that marked me forever. My first cousin, younger than me and like a brother, took his own life several years ago. At the time, we did not understand what bipolar disorder was. We did not recognise the signs. We did not have the language, awareness, or framework to understand bipolar disorder.

That loss stayed with me.

Over time, I also had to confront my own inner child, unresolved trauma, and the ways in which unaddressed emotional struggles can quietly ripple into one’s closest family.

Mental health is not an abstract subject for me; it has lived in my heart.

Professionally, during my years as Chief Global Leadership Development Officer at Yum Brands, I found myself increasingly drawn towards the human dimension of performance. We ran leadership development programmes in collaboration with senior leadership and a husband-and-wife team of therapists to help senior executives confront personal challenges that were limiting their impact. What became clear was this: professional excellence often rests on emotional clarity. When individuals addressed their internal struggles, they led more effectively, built healthier teams, created stronger organisations, and managed family relationships with care and respect.

That personal and professional journey ultimately led to the co-founding of Taskeen Mental Health Institution, a pioneering initiative aimed at preventing mental health issues. It felt like a natural culmination of experiences that had been converging for years. My thoughts, therefore, are shaped by a holistic understanding of this subject.

It is from this vantage point that a recurring question has stayed with me: why do health outcomes often fall short even when competent doctors, established institutions, and available treatments are in place?

Patients return repeatedly with the same complaints. Medications are stopped early. Second and third opinions are sought. Advice is listened to politely and then quietly set aside. These patterns are familiar to anyone who has spent time around hospitals, yet they are usually explained away as issues of awareness, literacy, or patient behaviour. Perhaps those explanations are incomplete.

Pakistan’s health debate often focuses on capacity: hospitals, beds, doctors, equipment and resources. While these constraints are real, they do not fully explain why health outcomes remain weak. Our largely biomedical system of diagnosis, prescribing, and intervention is necessary, but it often overlooks the human reality of illness.

Pakistan is a trauma-exposed society, shaped by Partition, political instability, economic insecurity, terrorism, natural disasters, and chronic stress. These experiences influence how people think, cope, trust, and respond to treatment.

These experiences do not remain neatly outside the clinic door. Prolonged stress affects how people engage with authority and advice. Trauma can shape attention, motivation, coping behaviour and trust, all of which matter deeply when treatment depends on long-term adherence. Economic anxiety influences diet, sleep, and lifestyle choices, while emotional distress often appears through physical symptoms, especially where mental health remains difficult to discuss openly.

Mental health practitioners describe well-being through a biopsychosocial lens, recognising that biological factors, psychological struggles and social realities all interact. The body influences the mind; the mind shapes the body; and society frames both.

When these realities are overlooked, a strictly biomedical approach risks missing the full picture. Disease may be identified correctly, but the person carrying it remains only partially understood.

Mental health brings this into especially sharp focus. Clinical knowledge and treatments exist, yet engagement remains fragile and stigma persistent.

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