Depression affects 42% of people in Pakistan's Sindh as COVID-19 crisis drags on

People wait for their turn at a vaccination centre in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, on May 24, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 17 July 2021
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Depression affects 42% of people in Pakistan's Sindh as COVID-19 crisis drags on

  • Sindh Mental Health Authority survey says 25 percent of respondents had suicidal thoughts
  • Over two-thirds of respondents said they did not have enough money to buy food

KARACHI: A survey on the psychological impact of the coronavrius crisis has revealed 42 percent of respondents in Pakistan's Sindh province have reported depression, a senior official said on Saturday.

All over the world, rates of mental illness have increased since the beginning of the pandemic.

While research on the psychological impact of COVID-19 across Pakistan is still limited, the outbreak, which started in February 2019, and ensuing restrictions have led to problems such as unemployment, closure of schools, limited socialization, and disruption in many routine activities — all likely to increase the psychological burden of the population.

The SMHA survey, conducted with the Edhi Foundation and researchers from four universities in Karachi, is the first such attempt in Pakistan to assess the situation.

During the two-month study in May and June, researchers interviewed 1,494 people — 757 in the province's rural areas and 737 in the cities. Some 48 percent of the respondents were men and 52 percent women.

"Around 42 percent people have been found with depression due different factors resulting from the coronavirus (pandemic)," Senator Dr. Karim Ahmed Khawaja, chairman of the SMHA, told Arab News.

The overall prevalence of self-reported anxiety was 85 percent, and 25 percent of the respondents admitted they have had suicidal thoughts.

In rural areas, the prevalence of self-reported depression was nearly twice higher, while anxiety levels were similar in both settings.

Neither depression nor anxiety, however, were directly related to the disease itself, as 87 percent of those surveyed said it posed "low risk." Some 20 percent of them have already had the virus.

Loss of income and food insecurity affected most of the respondents, especially in the countryside.

"Almost 62 percent reported major loss of income or earning," the SMHA report says —81 percent in the rural and 43 percent in the urban setting.

"Food source or security was also threatened with 72 percent reporting that they don’t have enough money to buy food."

Over 36 percent of the respondents reported borrowing money and 21 percent selling their property to make the ends meet.

While no earlier statistics regarding the prevalence of depression are available for comparison, doctors have noticed a surge during the pandemic, Prof. Iqbal Afridi, president of the Pakistan Psychiatric Association and head of the psychiatry department at the Jinnah Hospital in Karachi, told Arab News.

"The seriousness of this," he said, "can be gauged from the fact that we have been seeing over 400 patients at our OPD (outpatient department) every day, despite COVID-19 (restrictions)."


China’s mediation eases fighting between Pakistan, Afghanistan — sources

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China’s mediation eases fighting between Pakistan, Afghanistan — sources

  • China’s envoy shuttles between Pakistan and Afghanistan to mediate in conflict
  • Gulf countries that mediated in the past embroiled in Middle East conflict

ISLAMABAD/BEIJING: Chinese mediation efforts, including a message from ​President Xi Jinping, have helped ease the worst fighting between Pakistan and Afghanistan since the Taliban returned to power in 2021, three Pakistani government officials said.

The officials said a meeting between the Chinese ambassador to Pakistan, Jiang Zaidong, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif late last month included a message from Xi to cease hostilities.

Neither side has reported any Pakistani air strikes on Afghanistan in recent days and ground fighting along the 2,600-km (1,600-mile) border has tapered off, although daily clashes continue to be reported.

China has said it is ‌in contact ‌with both countries about ending hostilities but Mosharraf Zaidi, a ​spokesman ‌for ⁠Sharif who ​has previously ⁠said there would not be any talks with the Taliban, did not respond to questions about Beijing’s efforts.

Pakistani security officials have said the military campaign will continue until desired goals were achieved, which was to prevent militant attacks in Pakistan launched from Afghan soil.

Pakistan’s foreign ministry and military did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.

Islamabad launched air strikes on Afghanistan on February 26, saying the Taliban were providing a safe haven to ⁠militants carrying out attacks in Pakistan. Kabul denies the charge ‌and says militancy in Pakistan is an internal problem.

The ‌Chinese efforts came as Qatar, Saudi Arabia and ​Turkiye, who hosted talks between Pakistan and ‌Afghanistan during previous clashes in October, have been embroiled in the war in the Middle ‌East following the US and Israeli strikes on Iran.

“China’s Special Envoy for Afghanistan Affairs is currently shuttling between the two countries to mediate, while Chinese embassies in both nations maintain close communication with the respective parties,” the Chinese foreign ministry told Reuters in an email.

“The most urgent task ‌is to prevent the fighting from expanding and for the two countries to return to the negotiating table as soon as possible.”

The ⁠foreign ministry added ⁠that Foreign Minister Wang Yi held telephone talks with Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar on Tuesday to discuss the conflict.

China’s ambassador to Kabul, Zhao Xing, and the special envoy Yue Xiaoyong met Afghanistan’s acting Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi this week, the Afghan foreign ministry said in a statement.

Afghanistan and Pakistan have said they inflicted heavy damage on the other in the conflict and killed hundreds of opposition troops, without providing evidence. Reuters has not been able to verify the reports.

Beijing, a longtime Pakistani ally, has invested heavily in mines and minerals in both nations.

The investments include over $65 billion in road, rail and other development projects in Pakistan, part ​of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative to ​expand land and sea trade routes to Europe and Africa.