In India's rapidly urbanizing landscape, adolescent mental health has emerged as a silent crisis, particularly in the densely populated urban slums where over 65 million people reside in nearly 14 million households. These areas, characterized by poverty, overcrowding, limited access to services, and social stressors, amplify vulnerabilities for the country's 253 million adolescents aged 10-19. According to UNICEF data, 7.3% of young people aged 18-29 face mental health issues, but rates in slums are alarmingly higher, with studies reporting prevalence of common mental disorders (CMD) like depression and anxiety ranging from 12% to 47%. Suicide rates among adolescents are among the highest globally, with girls in rural areas facing 148 per 100,000 and boys 58 per 100,000, and urban slum conditions exacerbate risks through family conflicts, academic pressure, gender norms, and economic instability. The George Institute for Global Health India's landmark ARTEMIS study offers a beacon of hope, demonstrating scalable community-based interventions that significantly improve outcomes.
Unpacking the Mental Health Burden in Urban Slums
Urban slums in cities like New Delhi and Vijayawada represent microcosms of adversity. Here, adolescents navigate daily stressors including parental expectations, peer bullying, substance exposure, and fears of unemployment. Recent surveys indicate that 47.1% of screened teens exhibit high risk for CMD, far exceeding national averages. COVID-19 intensified this, with adversities like household income loss correlating to doubled depression rates among older teens (15-19 years). Low mental health literacy—only 1 in 27 with depression receives treatment—compounded by stigma, where disorders are often attributed to 'weakness' or supernatural causes, deters help-seeking. Girls face additional burdens from early marriage and safety concerns, while boys grapple with aggression and isolation. Government reports highlight slums' poorer health indicators than rural areas, underscoring the need for targeted, low-cost solutions.
The ARTEMIS Project: Design and Implementation
Launched by The George Institute for Global Health India, ARTEMIS (Adolescents' Resilience and Treatment nEeds for Mental health in Indian Slums) is India's first large-scale cluster randomized controlled trial (cRCT) specifically for urban slum adolescents. Spanning 60 clusters in New Delhi and Vijayawada, it reached over 70,000 young people through awareness drives, enrolling 3,739 for intensive evaluation. The two-pronged intervention combined locally tailored multimedia anti-stigma campaigns—videos, posters, and community events—with a digital screening tool on mobile devices. Primary health center (PHC) staff, trained in psychological first aid and basic counseling, used the tool to identify distress via Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) and self-harm risk scales. High-risk cases (47.1%) received stepped care: psychoeducation, problem-solving therapy, or referral. The trial, funded by UKRI/MRC, aligned with India's National Mental Health Programme, emphasizing feasibility in resource-poor settings.
Core Components of the Intervention
The anti-stigma arm targeted community myths, using adolescent-friendly content co-created with youth advisory groups. Digital vignettes depicted relatable stories of recovery, aired via local TV, social media, and school sessions, shifting attitudes from shame to support. The mHealth decision support system enabled rapid screening during routine PHC visits, generating risk profiles and care algorithms. Lay counselors delivered six weekly sessions of interpersonal therapy adapted for teens, focusing on emotion regulation and resilience. Parental involvement modules addressed family dynamics, while peer networks fostered ongoing support. This integrated approach bypassed traditional barriers like specialist shortages—India has just 0.75 psychiatrists per 100,000—leveraging existing PHC infrastructure with minimal additional cost (under $5 per screened adolescent).
Groundbreaking Results from the Trial
After 12 months, intervention clusters showed statistically significant gains (p < 0.05). Knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors toward mental health improved markedly, with mean score differences favoring intervention over controls. Depression scores dropped substantially in high-risk groups, maintaining recovery trajectories. Suicide risk reduced, with 86% of identified high-risk teens accessing care—a leap from baseline near-zero rates. Stigma scores fell, enabling open discussions; girls reported greater empowerment. Economic evaluation confirmed cost-effectiveness, at fraction of hospital-based care. These outcomes, detailed in the JAMA Psychiatry publication, validate task-sharing models where non-specialists handle 80% of cases.
For deeper insights, explore the full study in JAMA Psychiatry.
Photo by Yassine Khalfalli on Unsplash
Overcoming Challenges in Slum Settings
Implementation revealed hurdles: parental reluctance (30% dropout due to work), school scheduling conflicts, and digital literacy gaps (mitigated by voice-based tools). Stigma persisted initially, with 20% viewing counseling as 'madness treatment.' Yet, 90% adherence among engagers highlights cultural fit. Vijayawada's Telugu adaptations outperformed Delhi's Hindi, stressing localization. COVID disruptions paused fieldwork, but virtual pivots sustained momentum. Lessons: peer champions boosted uptake 25%, and PHC integration ensured sustainability.
Policy Implications and Scalability
ARTEMIS aligns with India's NMHP 2.0 and Ayushman Bharat, advocating digital tools in 1.5 lakh PHCs. At $2-5 per teen, scaling to 12 million slum adolescents costs ~$60M annually—0.1% health budget. Experts like Prof. Pallab Maulik urge integration into Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram. Telangana's Yuva Clinics exemplify buy-in. Success metrics: reduced CMD by 20-30%, potential suicide drop mirroring rural SANCHAR trial (40% risk reduction).
Learn more via the George Institute press release.
Global Comparisons and Broader Lessons
Globally, WHO notes 15% disease burden from adolescent MH disorders. Similar task-sharing succeeds in Brazil (15% depression drop) and Pakistan (mHealth cut risks 33%). India's urban focus fills gaps; slums mirror LMIC vulnerabilities. Unlike school-only models (missing dropouts), ARTEMIS's community net captures all. Experts praise hybrid digital-community blend, adaptable to Africa's slums or Latin America's favelas.
Building on Success: ANUMATI 2.0 Initiative
Extending ARTEMIS, ANUMATI 2.0 (Adolescent Resilience-Building) launches life skills education via in-person sessions and social media in Hyderabad/Delhi slums. Targeting dropouts and workers, it teaches stress management, decision-making. April 2026 Hyderabad symposium engaged 100+ stakeholders, yielding Hyderabad Declaration for school-PHC linkages. Funded similarly, protocol in Trials journal promises 20% resilience gains.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Real-World Impact
Dr. Sandhya Kanaka Yatirajula notes: "Teens shared stressors like academic pressure and gender restrictions." Prof. Maulik emphasizes: "Digital + community broke barriers, with 86% uptake." PHC workers reported empowerment; parents valued stigma reduction. Case: 16-year-old Vijayawada girl, post-screening, managed anxiety, resumed studies. Policymakers eye national rollout; NGOs adapt for 100+ slums.
Photo by Tito Texidor III on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Toward a Mentally Resilient India
As urbanization hits 600M by 2030, ARTEMIS blueprints action. Integrating AI screening, peer training, policy mandates could halve CMD burden. Challenges remain: funding (0.5% GDP on MH), workforce (train 1M lay counselors). Optimism prevails; with 1.4B youth dividend, investing now yields healthier adults. George Institute's model positions India as LMIC leader in equitable MH care.




.png&w=128&q=75)