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Article
24 Feb 2026

The Quiet Crisis of Adolescent Mental Health in India

Context

  • The deaths of three adolescent girls in Ghaziabad reveal a deeper structural problem rather than an isolated tragedy.
  • India is confronting a growing crisis in child mental health and adolescent wellbeing, shaped by early psychological vulnerability, social stigma, academic pressure, and an increasingly unregulated digital environment.
  • This convergence has created a public health emergency insufficiently addressed by families, schools, healthcare systems, and policy frameworks.

Early Vulnerability and Misunderstanding of Childhood Mental Health

  • Mental illness is often perceived as an adult issue, yet emotional and behavioural disorders appear in early childhood, sometimes as early as four or five years.
  • Anxiety, depression, and behavioural disorders emerge during critical developmental stages.
  • Early trauma, neglect, and chronic stress interfere with emotional and cognitive growth, often resurfacing with greater intensity during adolescence.
  • Childhood experiences accumulate rather than disappear. When early distress remains unrecognised, it later manifests in more severe psychological difficulties.
  • Disorders have also become more complex. Increasingly, children experience comorbidity: ADHD accompanied by anxiety, depression linked with compulsive screen use, and learning disorders associated with emotional distress.
  • Early warning signs, withdrawal, impulsivity, or sudden behavioural change, are frequently dismissed as misbehaviour, allowing long-term emotional harm to develop.

The Structural Gap: Data, Resources, and Access to Care

  • Survey data suggests that 7–10% of Indian adolescents have diagnosable mental health conditions, while 5–7% of school-aged children show symptoms of ADHD.
  • Yet institutional capacity remains inadequate. India has fewer than 10,000 psychiatrists for over 1.4 billion people, and only a small proportion specialise in child psychiatry.
  • The shortage of clinical psychologists, child specialists, and psychiatric social workers forces families to navigate fragmented care systems alone.
  • This imbalance between demand and infrastructure leads to delayed diagnosis, untreated distress, and crisis-driven intervention.
  • The issue therefore represents a wider public health failure rather than merely a clinical challenge.

The Digital Environment as an Intensifying Factor

  • The expansion of smartphones and affordable internet access has transformed childhood.
  • Hundreds of millions of children now interact daily with connected devices, a trend accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Education, communication, and entertainment occur on the same screen, blurring behavioural boundaries.
  • Excessive exposure does not directly cause neurodevelopmental disorders, but it intensifies vulnerabilities.
  • Internet addiction, marked by sleep disruption, irritability, and social withdrawal, has become common.
  • Prolonged screen exposure weakens attention, emotional regulation, and sleep patterns while displacing essential human interaction during periods of neuroplasticity.
  • Reduced real-world engagement undermines emotional development and delays recognition of underlying problems. 

Families, Schools, and Social Institutions

  • Families function as the first protective layer. Trauma-informed parenting, attentive listening, and early help-seeking significantly improve outcomes.
  • Parent and peer support groups reduce isolation and encourage resilience.
  • Schools, however, remain a major weakness. Educational systems prioritise academic performance, examinations, and rankings over emotional wellbeing.
  • Without emotional regulation and stress management, academic achievement becomes fragile.
  • Teachers often lack training to identify warning signs, and healthcare consultations focus mainly on physical growth rather than psychological health.

Policy and Social Response

  • Recent policy discussions acknowledge rising youth mental health concerns, and some regions are considering limits on adolescent social media exposure.
  • Effective action requires prevention, education, and support rather than punishment.
  • Key measures include school-based screening, teacher training, stronger referral networks, community counselling, and expansion of tele-mental health
  • Clear digital-use guidelines and accessible care for low-income families are essential. Cultural barriers remain significant; fear of labelling discourages families from seeking help.
  • Normalising conversations about mental wellbeing is therefore a national priority.

Reframing Childhood: A Cultural Argument

  • Modern childhood has become intensely competitive. Success is increasingly measured by grades rather than wellbeing.
  • Healthy development requires resilience, emotional security, and social connection alongside achievement.
  • Neglecting psychological health produces long-term social and economic consequences, including reduced productivity and strained relationships.

Conclusion

  • The Ghaziabad incident underscores interconnected causes: early vulnerability, institutional neglect, inadequate resources, digital overexposure, and social pressure.
  • Families, schools, healthcare providers, and policymakers share responsibility. Early detection, supportive parenting, school reform, responsible technology use, and stigma reduction are essential.
  • Protecting childhood wellbeing is not peripheral; it is central to national development and long-term societal stability.
Editorial Analysis

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Online Test
24 Feb 2026

Paid Test

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Current Affairs
Feb. 23, 2026

What is the PRASHAD Scheme?
Union Civil Aviation Minister recently said that the Centre is preparing plans to further develop tourist destinations around prominent temples in Andhra Pradesh under the PRASHAD scheme.
current affairs image

About PRASHAD Scheme:

  • The PRASHAD (Pilgrimage Rejuvenation and Spiritual Heritage Augmentation Drive) was launched in the year 2014-2015 under the Ministry of Tourism.
  • It is a Central Sector Scheme with the objective of integrated development of identified pilgrimage destinations.
  • The primary objective of the scheme is to develop tourism infrastructure at pilgrimage and heritage sites, ensuring a more enriching experience for pilgrims and heritage enthusiasts.
  • Under the scheme, the ministry provides financial assistance to state governments and Union Territory administrations for the development of tourism infrastructure at these sites.
  • The Central Government provides 100% funding for the project components undertaken for public funding.
  • It also welcomes voluntary contributions made through Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) AND Public Private Partnership (PPP).
  • The Ministry of Tourism has set up a Mission Directorate for implementing the PRASAD scheme.
    • The Mission Directorate identifies projects in the identified cities and coordinates with the states/UTs and other stakeholders to implement this scheme.
  • The scheme contributes to employment generation while also enhancing awareness and fostering skill and capacity development of the local communities.
Art and Culture

Current Affairs
Feb. 23, 2026

Key Facts about Vaan Island
A decade-long artificial reef restoration of Vaan Island generated socio-ecological benefits worth ₹61.67 crore—over twice its inflation-adjusted cost, according to a technical assessment by the Tamil Nadu Coastal Restoration Mission and its partners.
current affairs image

About Vaan Island:

  • Vaan is located in the Gulf of Mannar, which was declared a marine biodiversity park in 1986.
  • It is part of the Tuticorin group of islands.
  • It had suffered severe erosion.
  • To arrest the decline, scientists deployed a specially designed artificial reef modules around the island beginning in 2015.
  • The reef modules also facilitated rapid biological colonisation, supporting coral colonies per module.

Key Facts about Gulf of Mannar:

  • It is an inlet of the Indian Ocean, between southeastern India and western Sri Lanka.
  • It is bounded to the northeast by Rameswaram (island), Adam’s (Rama’s) Bridge (a chain of shoals), and Mannar Island.
  • It receives several rivers, including the Tambraparni (India) and the Aruvi (Sri Lanka).
  • The port of Tuticorin is on the Indian coast.
  • The gulf is noted for its pearl banks and sacred chank (a gastropod mollusk).
Geography

Current Affairs
Feb. 23, 2026

What is the Sayyad-3G Missile?
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) Navy recently tested the Sayyad-3G air defense missile.
current affairs image

About Sayyad-3G Missile:

  • It is a naval surface-to-air defense missile developed by Iran.
  • Derived from the land-based Sayyad-3 missile, the Sayyad-3G has been adapted for maritime use, providing medium-range air defense for warships and naval vessels.
  • It is launched from ships via a Vertical Launch System (VLS), offering 360-degree coverage and rapid response against aerial threats.
  • The missile is capable of intercepting multiple airborne targets, including warplanes, maritime patrol aircraft, and high-altitude UAVs.
  • It can operate both independently and as part of an integrated naval command-and-control network, using the ship’s onboard radar while retaining autonomous tracking and targeting capability.
  • Its operational range is reported to be approximately 150 kilometers.
Science & Tech

Current Affairs
Feb. 23, 2026

Key Facts about Kole Wetlands
A recent scientific study conducted at the Kole wetlands, a Ramsar-listed ecosystem in Kerala, has documented a total of 12 species of pygmy grasshoppers.
current affairs image

About Kole Wetlands:

  • The Kole wetlands are located in Kerala.
  • It is popular for its paddy cultivation that dates back to 300 years.
  • The wetland gets its name from its high productivity – ‘Kole’ literally translates to ‘bumper crop’ in Malayalam.
  • The Kole areas are low-lying and have a central, narrow strip covering a long expanse, with many pockets running into cultivated land on either side.
  • The region is naturally subject to saltwater ingression. During the monsoon, the entire region, which gets submerged under water, is cultivated by draining the water and by erecting bunds.
  • As Kole is a large sprawling wetland with human habitation all around, there are coconut and arecanut plantations, gardens and cultivated plants.
  • It is one of largest, highly productive and threatened wetlands in Kerala.
  • It is a part of the Central Asian Flyway of migratory birds.
  • It has been recognised as one of India's Important Bird Areas by BirdLife International.
  • It was declared as a Ramsar site of international importance in 2002.

What are Pygmy Grasshoppers?

  • They are species of insects (order Orthoptera) and are related to true grasshoppers.
  • However, the pygmy grasshopper has the forewings either reduced to small pads or absent.
  • The pygmy grasshopper is distinguished from the short-horned grasshopper by its practice of depositing its eggs singly in small grooves in the soil, rather than in underground chambers.
  • It is abundant in fields containing short grasses and on muddy shores.
  • Many species are dimorphic, having both a short form with reduced hindwings and a long form with functional hindwings.
  • Sound-producing and hearing organs are absent in pygmy grasshoppers.
Environment

Current Affairs
Feb. 23, 2026

Key Facts about Takeshima
South Korea recently protested a Japanese government-backed “Takeshima Day” event, calling it an unjust assertion of sovereignty over disputed islands also claimed by Japan.
current affairs image

About Takeshima:

  • It is a group of small islets situated in the middle of the Sea of Japan.
  • It is called Dokdo in South Korea and Takeshima in Japan.
  • It has also been known as the Liancourt Rocks, named by French whalers after their ship in 1849.
  • Administrative Control:
    • South Korea currently administers the islets, maintaining a small police detachment and facilities.
    • Japan claims sovereignty and considers the issue an unresolved territorial dispute.

Key Facts about the Sea of Japan:

  • The Sea of Japan, or East Sea, is a marginal sea of the western Pacific Ocean.
  • It is bound by Japan and Sakhalin to the east and by mainland Russia, North Korea, and South Korea to the west.
  • Connections:
    • It is connected with the East China Sea via the Tsushima and Korea straits and with the Okhotsk Sea in the north by the La Perouse and Tatar straits.
    • In the east, it is connected with the Inland Sea of Japan via the Kanmon Strait and the Pacific Ocean by the Tsugaru Strait.
  • Dohoku Seamount, an underwater volcano, is its deepest point.
  • Major Ports:
    • Russia: Vladivostok, Sovetskaya Gavan, Nakhodka, Alexandrovsk-Sakhalinsky, and Kholmsk.
    • North Korea: Hamhung, Chongjin, and Wonsan.
    • Japan: Niigata, Tsuruta, and Maizuru.
Geography
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