You are a working professional in Hyderabad. You have a good job — maybe in IT, maybe in finance, maybe in healthcare, maybe running your own business. You are educated, capable, and successful by most measures. And you are quietly falling apart.
You cannot sleep. Your mind replays work conversations at 2 AM. Your chest feels tight every Sunday evening because Monday is coming. You snap at your spouse over nothing and then feel guilty. You have no energy for your children. You used to enjoy cooking, reading, playing cricket — now you cannot find interest in any of it. You are drinking more than you used to. You have been to the doctor for headaches, back pain, or stomach problems and the tests are all normal. You tell everyone you are fine because that is what professionals do. You are not fine.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospital, we see an increasing number of Hyderabad professionals walking through our doors — software engineers, managers, entrepreneurs, doctors, lawyers, teachers — people who never imagined they would need a psychiatrist. The WHO officially recognised burnout as an occupational phenomenon in the ICD-11 (book by WHO). The APA has documented that workplace stress is the leading driver of anxiety and depression in working-age adults. This is not a weakness. This is your brain running out of the resources it needs to keep going.
You have a deadline. You feel pressure. You work extra hours. When the deadline passes, you recover. Your sleep returns to normal. Your mood bounces back. You enjoy the weekend. This is stress — temporary, proportionate, and recoverable. Everyone experiences it. It is not a mental health problem.
Burnout is what happens when work stress becomes chronic and recovery stops happening. The weekend does not recharge you anymore. Holidays feel like pressing pause on a disaster rather than actually resting. You feel emotionally exhausted — drained in a way that sleep cannot fix. You feel detached from your work — going through the motions without caring about quality or outcomes. You feel ineffective — doubting your own abilities despite years of competence. Burnout is not yet a clinical condition. But it is the doorstep of one. If burnout is not addressed, it frequently progresses into clinical depression or an anxiety disorder.
When the symptoms persist even when you are away from work — when you are sad on holiday, anxious on weekends, unable to enjoy anything even with no work pressure — the problem has moved from workplace burnout to a clinical condition. Depression that started as work stress takes on a life of its own — it changes your brain chemistry and no longer needs the trigger to keep running. At this point, time off alone will not fix it. You need treatment.
Professionals are the worst at seeking mental health help. Not because they do not know it exists. But because their identity is built on being competent, in control, and able to handle anything. Admitting you cannot cope feels like admitting you are not good at the one thing you have built your life around. So you push through. You work longer. You perform harder. And you break later — which means the condition is more severe by the time you finally walk into Bharosa.
The other barrier is confidentiality. Professionals worry that their employer, their colleagues, or their industry will find out. At Bharosa, all treatment is completely confidential. Your records are not shared with anyone without your written consent. Many of our professional patients come during lunch breaks, early mornings, or weekends. Nobody at your workplace needs to know.
Bharosa understands that professionals cannot take a week off for mental health care. Our outpatient services offer flexible scheduling. Your first assessment takes about 45 minutes. Follow-up appointments are shorter. Therapy sessions can be scheduled at times that fit your work calendar.
Many professionals do not need medication. They need CBT — which is specifically effective for the thinking patterns that drive professional burnout: perfectionism, catastrophic thinking about career consequences, inability to set boundaries, and the belief that any failure at work equals total personal failure. CBT at Bharosa teaches you to identify these patterns and replace them with more accurate, more sustainable thinking.
If the burnout has progressed into clinical depression or an anxiety disorder, medication may be recommended alongside therapy. SSRIs do not sedate you, do not impair your cognitive function, and do not make you unable to work. In fact, they restore the cognitive sharpness, sleep quality, and emotional stability that the untreated condition was destroying.
Q: Will psychiatric medication affect my work performance?
A: For most people, the opposite is true. Untreated depression and anxiety impair concentration, memory, decision-making, and energy. Treating these conditions restores the cognitive performance that was already being damaged.
Q: Can I get a medical leave certificate from Bharosa?
A: Yes. If your condition requires time off, our psychiatrists can provide medical documentation. The diagnosis on the certificate can be discussed with you for privacy.
Q: Is burnout the same as depression?
A: Not exactly. Burnout is work-specific exhaustion. Depression is a broader condition affecting all areas of life. But untreated burnout frequently progresses into clinical depression. Getting help at the burnout stage prevents the progression.
Your career should not cost you your mind. Bharosa provides confidential mental health care for Hyderabad professionals. Call +91 95050 58886.

Mental health struggles do not define you, and you don’t have to face them alone. If you notice any early signs of mental health disorders in yourself or a family member, take the first step today.