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Healthy India | Why mental healthcare is a human right of the survivors of human trafficking

Many of the survivors of human trafficking situations in many parts of the World, including India, are left to fend for themselves and do not get the benefit that can accrue from standardised but individually tailored mental health services at any of the stages of rescue, relief or rehabilitation, writes Prof. (Dr.) Nimesh G. Desai, former Director of the Institute of Human Behaviour & Allied Sciences.

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By Prof. (Dr.) Nimesh G Desai  Dec 13, 2023 10:42:55 AM IST (Updated)

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Healthy India | Why mental healthcare is a human right of the survivors of human trafficking
There has been evidence of a market for human beings as commodities, all through recorded history in various ways. In some enlightened circles, variably in different contexts, such practices had been objected to and argued against. The race-based phenomenon of black African persons being enslaved and transported across continents, for ownership by families of affording white families, has been perhaps one of the most well-known large-scale phenomena of human trafficking.

This single largest instance got corrected in steps by the conscientious American Society and Nation, although in steps and a bit tardive. That entire set of experiences of the Freedom of Slaves in the 19th Century, and Racial Rights Movement, in the late 20th Century, by themselves ought to have awakened the global community to be able to completely root out any such occurrences.
The two World Wars in the first half of the 20th Century, especially the 2nd World War and the consequent Human Rights movement, could well have been expected to arouse the collective conscience of this most evolved species to ensure complete elimination of the phenomenon.
The issue of legal enforcement and bringing about deeper sociocultural changes can be matters of another set of discourses, but the fact remains that despite how old this evil is, there is lack of appreciation of the need for mental health services for the persons rescued from trafficking situations. One of the glaring gaps in the services for the survivors viz. the need for mental health services, requires to be urgently recognised and corrected as a Human Right.
Even though we observe Human Rights Day every year with the themes such as 'Freedom, Equality and Justice for all', it cannot be fulfilled without explicit understanding of and commitment to the mental health needs of people such as trafficking survivors, whose human rights have been brutally trampled.
The unbelievable nature of, not only commodification but also depersonification, and dehumanisation of Homo Sapiens by their own kind, leads to the impact on the psyche and the behaviour of the survivors that is difficult to understand. The immediate impact of extreme low self-esteem, significant depressive symptoms or disorder, with suicidal tendencies along with inability to trust bordering on paranoia, and even indifferent or hostile reactions to any help offered are not only significant phenomena to deal with in themselves, but these can also create impedance in the initial rapport building and supportive counselling services, if made available.
The delicate aspect to be understood, herein, is the need for the survivors to experience a sense of safety, as a first step, almost always. The physical reality of their safety being assured, along with the basic needs of food, water, clothes work adequately in most survivors for the reassurance required.
No amount of verbal support or counselling can match or replace these basic needs, with a sense of being protected from further exploitation. A few or some of the survivors with more symptoms of severe trauma may require supportive counselling besides these, and rare instances of need for anxiety relieving medications. These form the first set of “relief” measures soon after rescue.
The next few steps in relief measures will need to include appropriate medical examinations and treatment, in as non-invasive and neutral manner as possible. Mental health disorders or psychiatric disorders may have predated the trafficking survivor’s experience or may result as a consequence.
The time for screening for disorders of Depression, Anxiety or any other psychiatric disorder can be after the initial few days, preferably after sufficient opportunities for ventilation and catharsis in age appropriate and culturally suitable modes. The fact that many a times, these survivors are women, young children or adolescents make the task of screening for sexual violation imperative, and yet delicate. Beyond these measures, candid and real time discussions of the situation and the future possibilities of rehabilitation contribute to psychological wellbeing and active participation.
Resilience, can and does help in long term consequences of the high levels of stress experienced, including the Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), a dreaded complication of such situations. The underlying sociocultural strengths and individual resilience can be invoked for less likelihood of complications like PTSD and a higher level of mental wellbeing if the above-mentioned steps are followed, with at least professional supervision and back up from mental health experts.
Supportively structured services, specifically focused on reducing the social exclusion or other negativity, with screening for the possible problems in adjustment in sexual, marital and socio & occupational spheres can meaningfully supplement the other rehabilitation measures.
Barring a relatively infrequent instances and availability of such sensitive services, many if not most of the survivors of human trafficking situations in many parts of the World, including India, are left to fend for themselves and do not get the benefit that can accrue from standardised but individually tailored mental health services at any of the stages of Rescue, Relief or Rehabilitation.
The fact that many of the survivors are not only women, young children and adolescents, but also persons from the socio economically marginalised groups, and also persons with invisible psychosocial or neurodevelopmental disabilities, further underscore the need for mental health services- for assessment and remediation.
Until the human society, achieves the not so lofty but Utopian looking goal of eliminating human trafficking, mental health services being made available and accessible, it would seem, is one of the items in the list of the “The Least We Must Do” for this abominable example of the worst face of human beings, the self-proclaimed highest form of evolved living beings.
 
 
The author, Prof. (Dr.) Nimesh G. Desai, is an Independent Consultant in Psychiatry & Mental Health, Former Director of the Institute of Human Behaviour & Allied Sciences (IHBAS), and currently works in the NGO Sector.
 
 

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