Mona's India Journey - 2023 part 4 - NIMHANS
One of the extra-curricular highlights of the trip was our day at NIMHANS. NIMHANS is the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro-Sciences, and they are at the forefront of integrative mental health research, academics (MD, PhD, and fellowships), and clinical services.
NIMHANS has a HUGE campus. It takes up five (5) full city blocks in Bangalore. It reminds me a lot of Queens University back home where it is integrated into the city, and blends the hospital buildings, with other buildings (offices, security, research) as well as natural elements (gardens, trees, etc.).
We were there for the day, and so we only tipped the iceberg of what is happening at NIMHANS, and yet what we saw and heard was both inspiring and encouraging.
According to NIMHANS’s director, Dr. Pratima Murthy,
“NIMHANS is world-renowned as a center for mental health, neurosciences and allied fields. The vision of NIMHANS is to be a world leader in these areas and to evolve state-of-the-art approaches to patient care through translational research. The contributions of NIMHANS in providing the highest quality of clinical services, standards of excellence in training and active engagement in research in these specialized fields are widely known. NIMHANS has been committed to training in basic sciences related to the brain and mind, behaviour in health and ill-health, translation of evidence from the bench to the bedside, as well as in the community. The concurrent emphasis on both biomedicine as well as psychosocial aspects has driven research ranging from neuroplasticity, imaging and genomics to the psychological, spiritual and anthropological aspects of mental well-being and illness.”
They are working to be truly integrative in nature. As part of our discussions with the team, we learned that they are doing work on many things, including projects on multiple sclerosis (MS), depression, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer’s. The intention is to provide the best care possible for the patient, using all available tools, including imaging (PET, MRI, etc.), blood work, gut microbiome profiles, cognitive testing, etc. They also shared with us about the different income tiers, and how half of their patients (the ones who are living in poverty) do not have to pay for the services and treatments. NIMHANS has government funding to support this. Their hospitals have 1000 beds and about 5000 employees.
They shared an example with us. When a patient comes in for a mental health assessment, they meet with a yoga therapist, āyurvedic practitioner/doctor, and a psychiatrist - everyone all together in the same room at the same time. Together they decide the appropriate starting point, based on where the patient is at, and how to proceed with helping the person manage their condition. If a condition is mild, often they begin with yoga to build resilience, confidence, and self-awareness. If the condition is more complex or chronic, Āyurvedic practices and medicines are added to the yoga. And if the condition is psychiatric, then pharmaceuticals are used with the Yogic and Āyurvedic practices.
Here is a tour of their Yoga Centre. Yoga has its own entire building.
And they had this really beautiful yoga poster, so I took a video for us :)
We also got to tour their pañcakarma (Āyurvedic bio-purification) floor in the main building (different building from the Yoga Centre).
I hope this gives a sense of some of the amazing work that is being done at NIMHANS - truly inspirational. There is so much more, and yet, this is what I can put down at this time. Know that NIMHANS offers all sorts of opportunities for education, research, and so forth. If you want to explore them more, you can find their website here.
Thanks for reading! Next week I get back on a plane to fly home…