Try GOLD - Free
Behind the Façade: Mental Health and the Cost of Academic Pressure
Outlook
|August 11, 2025
The rising toll - India's most prestigious universities are home to excellence, aspiration-and increasingly, emotional turmoil. Student suicides, once considered isolated tragedies, are becoming distressingly common.

The causes are complex: a blend of intense academic competition, cultural dislocation, institutional inertia, and an enduring stigma around mental illness.
Admissions to elite institutions like IITS, AIIMS, and top private universities remain fiercely competitive. Many students spend their adolescence in coaching classes, trained to crack entrance exams but ill-prepared for failure or even for the mental demands of success. Once inside, the pressure persists. Curricula are rigorous, grading is unforgiving, and academic support often limited. For first-generation learners or those from rural areas, the adjustment can be especially difficult.
Navigating English-medium education, unfamiliar social norms, and high expectations, they may feel isolated despite being surrounded by peers.
Degrees are not just qualifications.
They are symbols of family sacrifice, social mobility, and national prestige.
When students falter, they carry not just personal disappointment but a deep sense of letting others down.
Missing safeguards
Mental health infrastructure on campuses remains inadequate. A 2019 study in the Indian Journal of Psychiatry found that fewer than 20% of Indian universities have full-time professional mental health staff. Nationally, India has only 0.75 psychiatrists per 100,000 people-far below the WHO'S recommended 3 per 100,000.
This story is from the August 11, 2025 edition of Outlook.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Outlook

Outlook
Chop and Change
India should not align itself with the American camp. It should continue to assert its strategic autonomy
7 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
Has the Maharaja Stopped Dancing?
To his credit, Rajinikanth made the transition from cinema that was made for single screens and their unruly audiences to new-age films in which we see his young, VFX version
7 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
Two to Tango
Keeping relations on an even keel with China is important for India's economic growth, but joining a world order led by it would be suicidal
5 mins
September 21, 2025
Outlook
Multipolarity or a New Bipolarity?
Even as Beijing continues to challenge conventional notions of democracy and human rights, America will have to decide what it stands for and what it wants from the world
7 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
You Have no Enemies, you say?
India’s interests lie in a closer strategic partnership with the US, just as any American administration cannot ignore the world’s most populous country that is in a critical geography and has economic and military potential
4 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
How Fragile we are
Tariff turbulence and India's pursuit of strategic autonomy
9 mins
September 21, 2025
Outlook
Chasing a Chimera
India, China and Russia as well as most of the developing countries are committed to a multipolar world where policies are not decided by just one or two countries, but there are several power poles
7 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
Behind the Mask
There is a pressing need to map the gaps between branding claims and effective achievements on the foreign policy front, based on the parameters set by the Modi government itself
7 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
The Tianjin Trifecta
Is India the face of the forces directed by Russia in a new, turbocharged geopolitical vehicle designed and built by China?
7 mins
September 21, 2025

Outlook
Lyrically Yours
A remarkable travelogue across Indian cities through the years
5 mins
September 11, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size