Mano Yatra is not just a walk. It is a statement. It is Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospital's way of saying — out loud, in public, in the streets of Hyderabad — that mental health is health. That seeking help is brave, not shameful. That the families who are struggling in silence behind closed doors deserve to know they are not alone.
In a city where people will openly discuss their sugar levels, their blood pressure, and their knee replacement — but will whisper the word depression as if it were a curse — Mano Yatra exists to change the conversation. Literally. One step at a time.
Mano Yatra — which translates to Journey of the Mind — is Bharosa's annual community awareness initiative. It brings together patients, families, mental health professionals, students, and everyday citizens from across Hyderabad to walk together for one shared cause: making mental health care as normal and as accessible as any other kind of medical care. The WHO has identified stigma as the single biggest barrier to mental health treatment worldwide. In India, NIMHANS estimates that nearly 80 percent of people with mental health conditions never receive treatment — not because treatment does not exist, but because shame prevents them from seeking it. Mano Yatra exists to chip away at that shame.
Mano Yatra works because it takes mental health out of the hospital and into the street. When hundreds of people walk together through LB Nagar, Karmanghat, and Dilsukhnagar carrying banners that say depression is not weakness and addiction is a disease, not a choice — something shifts. The auto driver sees it. The chai shop owner sees it. The grandmother on her balcony sees it. And somewhere in one of those homes along the route, a family that has been hiding their son's schizophrenia or their daughter's anxiety or their father's alcoholism sees a crowd of people saying it is okay to ask for help — and maybe, for the first time, they believe it.
Visibility is therapeutic. When a recovered patient walks alongside their psychiatrist in a public event, they are not just raising awareness — they are reclaiming their story. They are saying I went through this, I got help, and I am standing here. That is more powerful than any billboard or social media post. Because stigma does not die in a conference room. It dies when people see other people — real people, their neighbours, their colleagues — openly owning their mental health journey.
Mano Yatra typically begins at a central point near Bharosa Hospital in Karmanghat and proceeds through the main roads of East Hyderabad. Participants include the Bharosa clinical team — psychiatrists, psychologists, nurses, counsellors — alongside patients who choose to participate, family members, college students, local leaders, and community volunteers. The walk is peaceful, joyful, and intentionally public — designed to be seen, to spark curiosity, and to start conversations.
Alongside the walk, Bharosa sets up free screening camps where anyone from the community can have a confidential, no-cost mental health checkup. Many people who would never walk into a psychiatric hospital will stop at a street-side camp — and that first conversation, that first screening, has been the beginning of recovery for hundreds of families in East Hyderabad.
Mano Yatra events include short talks by Bharosa's psychiatrists — in simple Telugu and Hindi, not medical jargon — explaining what depression really is, how addiction works, when to seek help, and what treatment actually looks like. Recovered patients and their families share their stories — with consent and dignity — showing the community that recovery is real, that it happens right here in their neighbourhood, and that it could happen for their family too.
Dr. Uday Kiran, the founder of Bharosa Neuro Psychiatry Hospital, created Mano Yatra because he saw, every single day, families arriving at the hospital years too late — not because treatment was unavailable, but because stigma had kept them away. Parents who watched their son deteriorate for three years before admitting he needed a psychiatrist. Wives who endured a husband's addiction for a decade before someone told them it was a medical condition. Elderly parents who were told their confusion was old age when it was treatable dementia.
Mano Yatra is Bharosa's answer to the question — how do we reach the families who will never Google mental health, who will never call a hospital, who will never take the first step — unless someone meets them where they are. The walk goes to them. The awareness goes to their streets. And the message — you are not alone, help exists, there is no shame — goes directly into the communities that need it most.
Mano Yatra is open to everyone. You do not need to be a patient or a family member. You do not need a medical background. If you believe that mental health deserves the same respect as physical health, you are welcome. Follow Bharosa Hospital on social media for the next Mano Yatra date. Bring your family. Bring your neighbours. Walk with us. Because every person who shows up is one more voice saying — this matters.
Q: When is the next Mano Yatra?
A: Mano Yatra events are held periodically throughout the year. Follow Bharosa Hospitals on social media or call +91 95050 58886 for the next scheduled walk.
Q: Is Mano Yatra only for patients and families?
A: No. Mano Yatra is for everyone — students, professionals, community leaders, and anyone who wants to support mental health awareness in Hyderabad.
Q: Is the free screening truly confidential?
A: Yes. All screenings at Mano Yatra events are conducted privately and confidentially. No personal information is shared without consent.
Stigma ends when silence ends. Join Mano Yatra — Bharosa's mental health awareness walk in Hyderabad. Call +91 95050 58886 or follow us on social media for the next event.

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.