As a psychiatrist, I often find myself confronting not only the symptoms of mental illness but also the deep scars left by stigma. Even in 2025, despite advances in neuroscience and a growing cultural focus on mental health, stigma remains one of the greatest barriers to healing. It manifests in silence, shame, and misunderstanding, and it affects patients, families, and even those of us within the psychiatric profession. Addressing stigma is therefore not only our ethical duty but a central part of psychiatric care itself.
Stigma operates on multiple interconnected levels. At its most personal, stigma is internalized. Many of my patients express guilt or self-blame for their conditions, viewing depression or anxiety as personal failings rather than treatable illnesses. This self-stigma leads to avoidance of care, isolation, and delayed recovery. I have seen individuals wait years before seeking help because they feared being labeled “crazy” or “weak.” This internal battle can often be more debilitating than the symptoms themselves.
At the social level, public stigma continues to shape perceptions of mental illness. Although awareness movements, such as “Bell Let’s Talk Day,” have improved dialogue around topics like depression and anxiety, severe conditions (such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder) remain highly misunderstood. The media often perpetuates stereotypes by portraying people with mental illness as dangerous or unstable, reinforcing fear rather than empathy. These portrayals not only harm those living with these conditions but also contribute to social exclusion, unemployment, and discrimination.
Structural stigma, meanwhile, is embedded within the very institutions meant to provide care. Mental health services often receive less funding than other medical departments. Waiting lists for therapy or inpatient care can be months long. As a psychiatrist, it can be frustrating to see patients’ recovery hindered not by lack of treatment options, but by systemic neglect and undervaluation of mental health.
Every patient who walks through a psychiatrist’s door is not just battling symptoms but confronting a society that often misunderstands their struggle.
Stigma also exists within medicine itself. Psychiatry has long been seen by some medical professionals as less “scientific” than other specialties. During my training, I remember hearing a colleague refer to psychiatry as “soft medicine.” These attitudes diminish the importance of mental health and discourage aspiring physicians from entering the field. Ironically, psychiatry is one of the few branches of medicine that fully integrates biology, psychology, and social context: the very principles that define holistic health care.
Reducing stigma requires action at multiple levels. On a systemic level, health care organizations must prioritize mental health parity: ensuring that psychiatric illnesses receive equal funding and respect as physical ones. Educational programs should begin early, normalizing mental health discussions in schools and communities. Within medical education, psychiatry should be presented not as a fallback specialty but as a vital, intellectually rigorous field that sits at the intersection of neuroscience and human experience. On an interpersonal level, psychiatrists can challenge stigma through compassionate communication and language. Using person-first language (“a person living with schizophrenia” rather than “a schizophrenic”) helps humanize the patient and shift focus from diagnosis to identity. Advocacy also plays a crucial role in reducing stigma. Stigma in psychiatry remains an obstacle, but it is not insurmountable. Each patient encounter offers an opportunity to replace judgment with understanding and silence with dialogue. My work as a psychiatrist constantly reminds me that healing extends beyond medication and therapy; it also involves rebuilding dignity and belonging. As a patient once said to me near the end of her treatment, “I didn’t just get better because of the medicine. I got better because I stopped being ashamed.”
Psychiatry, at its core, is about restoring hope. By addressing stigma (within ourselves, our profession, and society) we take one step closer to a world where mental illness is met not with fear, but with compassion, respect, and care.
Devina Maya Wadhwa is a psychiatrist.



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