He had saved lives that day. Three deliveries. One emergency caesarean. A near-cardiac arrest in the corridor. He went home at 11 PM, ate dinner standing up, and stared at the wall for an hour. He had not slept properly in eight months. He had not taken a real holiday in two years. His wife had stopped asking him how his day was, because the answer never changed. The next morning, he went back to work. Six months later, he was found in his hospital quarters. He was thirty-four years old, the kind of doctor every patient hoped to get. And nobody had asked him, even once, how he was actually doing.
If you are a doctor in India reading this, you already know how common this story has become. Indian medical professionals have one of the highest suicide rates of any occupational group in the country, and it is getting worse. At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals - Hyderabad, we treat physicians regularly — quietly, confidentially, and with the discretion that doctor-patients require. This article is for you. Or for someone you love who happens to wear a white coat and has stopped sleeping properly somewhere in the last few years.
Globally, doctors have rates of suicide significantly higher than the general population. The World Health Organization recognises healthcare workers as a high-risk occupational group for depression, anxiety, burnout, substance use, and suicide. Studies in The Lancet Psychiatry, one of the most respected peer-reviewed psychiatry journals in the world, have repeatedly documented elevated rates of suicide among physicians compared to age-matched general populations, with female doctors and trainees particularly at risk.
The American Medical Association, the largest professional body of physicians in the United States, has formally recognised physician burnout and depression as a public health crisis and has called for systemic intervention. In India, the picture is even harder. Long hours, violent patient encounters, inadequate institutional support, lack of mental health infrastructure for healthcare workers, and a deeply ingrained culture of stoicism combine to create a profession in which asking for help is often seen as failure. The result is that Indian doctors die by suicide at rates that should shock the country, and largely do not — because the deaths are quiet, the obituaries are vague, and the colleagues who survive learn very early to never speak of it.
Start with sleep deprivation. Junior doctors in Indian hospitals often work shifts that would be illegal in most other professions. The brain is asked to make life-and-death decisions on four hours of broken sleep, day after day, for years. Add chronic exposure to suffering, death, and grief without any structured emotional processing. Add the constant fear of medical errors, malpractice, and patient violence. Add the financial pressure of long training, education debt, and the sacrifice of years that other people spend building lives. Add the cultural expectation that doctors are heroes who do not have human needs. The combination is not survivable indefinitely, and most doctors know it without ever being told.
Then add the specific cruelty of being a healer who is not allowed to be a patient. Doctors who admit to depression often face stigma from colleagues, fear losing their professional standing, and worry that their ability to practice will be questioned. Many self-medicate with alcohol, sleeping pills, or psychiatric medications they prescribe themselves. Almost none of them seek formal psychiatric care until they are in a serious crisis — and by then, the damage is often profound.
Chronic insomnia or early morning waking. A flat, exhausted relationship with work that used to feel meaningful. Cynicism, irritability, or emotional detachment from patients. Increasing alcohol use in the evenings to switch the brain off. Quiet thoughts about leaving medicine, leaving the city, leaving the profession entirely. Fleeting thoughts about not being there any more, often dismissed as just stress. Physical symptoms with no clear cause — headaches, chest pain, digestive trouble, palpitations. If three or more of these are present in you or a doctor you love, this is not just a hard week. This is a clinical picture.
At Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals Hyderabad, we treat doctor-patients with the absolute confidentiality and clinical care they need. Our consultant MD Psychiatrists understand the specific pressures of medical practice in India and the particular barriers doctors face in seeking help. First consultations can be arranged outside regular outpatient hours where needed. Treatment is evidence-based — Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), trauma-informed approaches where indicated, and where appropriate, pharmacological treatment for depression, anxiety, or sleep disturbance.
Doctors who come to us are usually surprised by two things. First, how much better they start feeling within weeks of proper treatment. Second, how much they had been carrying that they did not even recognise as suffering — because they had been comparing themselves to colleagues carrying the same load. The treatment does not make you a worse doctor. It almost always makes you a better one. And it gives you back the years of life you were quietly preparing to lose.
Q: Will my treatment be confidential from my hospital?
A: Yes. Medical confidentiality is a legal obligation in India and is rigorously protected.
Q: Will seeking psychiatric help affect my medical licence?
A: No. Receiving treatment is a sign of responsibility, not impairment.
Q: Can I get an appointment outside my working hours?
A: Yes. We accommodate doctor-patients with flexible scheduling where possible.
Q: I am self-medicating. Is that a problem?
A: Yes. Self-prescribing psychiatric medication is risky. A proper psychiatric assessment is essential.
Q: Does Bharosa offer this kind of confidential care for doctors in Hyderabad?
A: Yes. Discreet, evidence-based psychiatric care for medical professionals is available at our LB Nagar facility.
If you are a doctor and you are not okay, the bravest thing you can do is the simplest thing — make one call. Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospitals - Hyderabad is here, confidentially, on +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.