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TRA Research releases white-paper on mental well-being of citizens across urban India

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Guwahati citizens showed highest mental well-being in their ability to cope with their current worries of family health, work stability as well as their fears on country’s health and economic impact

TRA Research released a new finding from its recent white-paper, a research survey conducted across 16 cities with 902 urban citizens to delve deeper into the mental well-being of citizens across urban India. Guwahati citizens showed the highest mental well-being (84 per cent) in their ability to cope with their current worries of family health and work stability as well as their fears on the country’s health and economic impact. This was followed by Delhi-NCR (78 per cent) which had the second best mental well-being score. Other cities which displayed a ‘Good’ ability mental well-being of their citizens include Indore (75 per cent), Coimbatore (73 per cent) and Pune (72 per cent). Mumbai showed the lowest mental well-being index at just 28 per cent, showing severe stresses and anxieties among the citizenry, followed by Lucknow at 36 per cent.

N Chandramouli, CEO, TRA Research, explained the concept of mental well-being and said, “The mental well-being of citizens in the context of this research is seen as their ability to cope with current worries regarding the pandemic. The ability to cope with worries depends on the individual’s mind-set of course, but also depends on the city’s general acceleration rate in patients, as also the a city’s complex demographics that may impede coping with the pandemic. The rapid spread in Mumbai with the highest number of COVID-19 patients is also reflected in the low mental well-being of its citizens with regard to coping with the disease.” The mental well-being index has been calculated with coping index as the numerator and the worry index as the denominator, measured as a percentage and the coping index was measured on four parameters and the worry index on six.

Dr Jalpa Butta, Consultant Psychiatrist, Global Hospital said, “Coping skills are determined by one’s resilience, attitude, belief system and support system. It is reassuring that most of the people in smaller cities are coping better with good mental well-being. In the larger cities there could be many factors responsible like worry on account of stability of work. When our identity is determined by our career and earning capacities, people can feel at a total loss when that may get impacted. Relationships are also getting fragile in bigger cities, giving poor interpersonal support, which is much needed for a sense of mental well-being.”

Chandramouli elaborated further on the difference in cities, “The smaller cities have a relatively higher mental well-being index as compared to the larger cities and Guwahati, Jaipur, Indore, Pune, Coimbatore are coping better with the situation, than their counterparts in cities like Mumbai, Chennai and Kolkata.”

Dr Bhuta suggested attitudinal alterations to cope. She said, “It is important for all of us to find peace within ourselves, develop a more spiritual and accepting attitude, learn to deal with change and embrace the higher power during difficult times.”

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