He has a PhD from a top institution. He speaks three languages fluently. He has published in international journals. He also still freezes when a stranger asks him his surname, because he knows what happens next when certain people hear it. He has lived through the slow, cumulative weight of a thousand small moments — the professor who assumed he was there on quota, the colleague whose tone changed when his community became clear, the landlord who suddenly said the flat was already taken, the sideways comments at weddings about people who did not know their place. None of these incidents, individually, looked like trauma. Together, they have shaped his nervous system, his self-image, and the way he walks into rooms for the rest of his life. He has never spoken about any of this to a psychiatrist. He assumed it was not the kind of thing psychiatry treated. This article exists to tell him, and anyone else in his position, that he was wrong.
At Bharosa, we believe that caste trauma is real, measurable, and worthy of serious clinical attention. We also believe that most psychiatric practice in India has failed to name it, and that the silence has cost generations of patients the help they needed. This article is meant to open the conversation. If you or someone you love carries the accumulated weight of caste-based discrimination, you are not imagining it, you are not being oversensitive, and you deserve care that takes your experience seriously.
Caste trauma refers to the cumulative psychological, emotional, and sometimes physical harm produced by exposure to caste-based discrimination, exclusion, and violence — both overt and subtle — across a lifetime and, often, across generations. It includes the direct experience of discrimination, the anticipation of discrimination, the internalised shame that decades of messaging produce in those on the receiving end, and the intergenerational transmission of these wounds through family, community, and self-image. The World Health Organization recognises discrimination and social exclusion as major social determinants of mental health, and identifies marginalised populations as high-risk groups for depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and substance use worldwide.
The American Psychological Association, the leading professional body of psychologists in the United States, has published extensively on what is called race-based traumatic stress in the American context, documenting that sustained exposure to discrimination produces measurable psychological injury similar to post-traumatic stress, with specific features related to chronic vigilance, internalised shame, and the absence of a clear single-incident trauma. The framework translates directly to caste trauma in the Indian context, though the Indian psychiatric literature has been slow to adopt it. The Lancet, one of the world's most respected medical journals, has published global research on the mental health impact of structural discrimination, consistently finding elevated rates of distress in populations subject to sustained social exclusion.
Indian psychiatric training has historically followed Western diagnostic frameworks that do not explicitly include caste as a trauma variable. A patient arriving with depression, anxiety, or chronic stress is assessed for the standard contributors — family, work, medical history, genetics — but is rarely asked directly about the cumulative impact of caste-based experiences on their mental life. If the patient does not volunteer it, the clinician often does not ask. The patient, who has usually spent a lifetime being told that caste is either not a problem or not polite to discuss in professional spaces, rarely volunteers it. The result is that the single most significant contributor to the patient's mental health picture goes unnamed in their treatment, and the treatment is accordingly incomplete.
Add the issue of internalised shame. Many patients from marginalised communities have absorbed the messaging that their struggles are personal failings rather than responses to external injury. They blame themselves for their anxiety, their depression, their inability to feel fully comfortable in certain rooms. Recognising caste trauma as a legitimate clinical contributor is the first step toward freeing the patient from the burden of carrying the injury as if it were their own fault. This is not political. This is clinical. A person cannot heal from an injury they have never been allowed to name.
Chronic hypervigilance in social and professional settings, particularly settings dominated by people from privileged backgrounds. Anxiety about being exposed, judged, or dismissed based on identity. Internalised self-doubt about achievements, even when objectively earned. Imposter syndrome that is particularly intense and specific in nature. Suppressed anger that has nowhere to go. Physical symptoms — headaches, gastrointestinal trouble, cardiovascular stress — associated with sustained vigilance. Depression, particularly a form characterised by flatness and resignation rather than acute sadness. Difficulty building trust with authority figures, professionals, and institutions. Generational transmission of these patterns to children, who absorb them even when the direct experiences are not their own. The cumulative toll is significant, and it is measurable.
At Bharosa, our consultant MD Psychiatrists and clinical psychologists treat every patient with respect and without assumptions. Where caste-based experiences have contributed to the clinical picture, we are willing to name them, explore them, and integrate them into the treatment plan. We use trauma-informed approaches including Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) adapted for the specific challenges of sustained discrimination-related stress. Where depression, anxiety, or PTSD is well established, we treat those directly. Confidentiality, as with every patient at Bharosa, is a legal and ethical obligation that we take with complete seriousness.
The goal is not to make the injustice disappear. The world outside the clinic is not ours to control. The goal is to help the patient separate what is theirs to carry from what has been placed on them, reduce the nervous system burden that sustained discrimination creates, and rebuild a sense of self that does not depend on the approval of those who would not give it anyway. Patients who have done this work consistently report a specific kind of freedom — the freedom of walking into rooms without the weight of anticipatory judgement in their chest. It does not solve the larger problem. It does, significantly, improve the quality of the life being lived.
Q: Is caste trauma recognised in psychiatry?
A: Increasingly yes, particularly through the lens of discrimination-related traumatic stress.
Q: Will the clinician take me seriously?
A: At Bharosa, yes. Your experiences will be heard without judgement.
Q: Can therapy help if the discrimination is ongoing?
A: Yes. Therapy builds resilience and reduces the nervous system burden even when the environment cannot change.
Q: Do I need medication?
A: Only if depression or anxiety has become significant. Therapy is the core of treatment.
Q: Does Bharosa offer this care in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Respectful, trauma-informed care is available at our LB Nagar facility.
What you have carried is real, and it is worthy of proper care. Speak to Bharosa in Hyderabad, in full confidence. 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.