National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences
Established in 1974, National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro
Sciences is a non-profit public higher education institution located in
the the urban setting of the metropolis of Bangalore (population range
of over 5,000,000 inhabitants), Karnataka. Officially
accredited/recognized by the University Grants Commission, India,
National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS) is a
coeducational higher education institution. National Institute of Mental
Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS) offers courses and programs leading
to officially recognized higher education degrees such as bachelor
degrees, master degrees, doctorate degrees in several areas of study.
NIMHANS also provides several academic and non-academic facilities and
services
The history of the mental health care system in Karnataka dates back
to the colonial times. In the18th century, the legendary warrior Tipu
Sultan was killed by the British and power was handed back to the
Wodeyar clan. A British army regiment was stationed in Bangalore, which
was then part of the princely state of Mysore. During the period,
especially from 1831-1881, under the administration of British
Commissioner Sir Mark Cubbon, the region witnessed a lot of developments
in the healthcare system. Western medicine was introduced and
hospitals/dispensaries were opened for the care of British infantry,
Indian soldiers and civilians.
The Bangalore Lunatic Asylum was founded in 1847. Dr. Charles Irwing
Smith, a British medical practitioner in Bangalore, played a pivotal
role in the establishment of the asylum. The simple yet airy structured
asylum with 50 beds was located at Pete or Pettah , Dharmambudi tank
area (the present State Bank of Mysore head office building at the
intersection of Kempegowda Road and Avenue Road, Bangalore).At the asylum, the mentally-ill were allowed to move freely on the
premises and were provided with opportunities to take part in activities
like rope-making, gardening, cleaning, and other domestic works. In the
ensuing years, doctors from Indian Medical Service were appointed and
the number of patients at the asylum began to rise. By 1914, about 100
patients were admitted and discharged, on an average, every year.
In 1925, the asylum was rechristened Mental Hospital signifying a
paradigm shift in management of mental problems. The old asylum / mental
hospital on Avenue Road was closed in 1936-37, and the staff and
patients moved to the new site Lakkasandra, the second highest hillock
in Bangalore.
More than 100 acres of land was donated by the Maharaja of Mysore to
establish the Mental Hospital. Dr. Frank Xavier Noronha became the first
superintendent of the Mental Hospital. At this time (in 1936), Sir
Mirza Ismail held the coveted position of the Dewan of Mysore. This
period was billed as the golden age of Mysore. Both Sir Ismail and Dr.
Noronha were keen gardeners and avid horticulturists. Their common
passion for well-designed public spaces led to the formation of a new
structure for the Mental Hospital encompassing vibrant gardens replete
with lush landscapes and open spaces. The duo personally planted many of
the exotic tree species that can still be seen on the campus.
The new building itself was loosely based on the plans of the
Institute of Psychiatry building, which was then housed at the Bethlem
hospital site in Moorfields (United Kingdom). It was constructed by the
civil engineering firm, the Mysore Engineering Company (MEC), which was
staffed entirely by Indian engineers. It was considered essential that
the spaces in an asylum provide an environment conducive for recovery,
and this principle lay at the root of asylum design, where “where one
could be both mad and safe”.This careful consideration to a healing environment contrasted
sharply with other asylums in India, which were often hand-me-downs from
jails or barracks. This building, and the Hospital for Europeans and
Indians in Ranchi, were the only two custom-built asylums in British
India in the early 20th century, and were designed with the explicit
purpose of providing a healing environment, and with all the necessary
modern attributes.
Dr. Noronha, after his retirement, was succeeded by Dr. MV
Govindaswamy who was a trained doctor in the Mysore Medical Service with
BSc (Chemistry) and MA (Psychology) degrees. When Dr. Govindaswamy
joined as the medical superintendent of the Mysore State Mental
Hospital, he was faced with the challenge of developing the mental
hospital into a ‘open’, model mental health care institution. Dr.
Govindaswamy successfully transformed the hospital into a modern
institute of mental health and neuro sciences, which further went on to
become the leading and first-of-its-kind training and research centre in
India.
In 1946, the Health Survey and Development Committee (also known as
the Bhore Committee being under the Chairmanship of Sir JoesphBhore)
reviewed the state of mental health in India and recognized the
paramount need for the production of an adequate number of medical and
auxillary personnel trained in various aspects of mental health. The
Committee recommended that all the professionals employed in mental
health work should possess a recognized Diploma in Psychological
Medicine. The committee also opined that the expansion of mental health
services could be carried out only if there were simultaneous intensive
training programmes.
The State Government Mental Hospital, Bangalore, which had already
built up certain traditions since 1938 in terms of under-graduate and
graduate teaching in the field of Psychiatry was chosen as the centre of
training by the Government of India. It became the first postgraduate
training institute in psychiatry for the country.
Dr. MV Govindaswamy, played a vital role in the formation of the
AIIMH and became its founder-director. Academic activities and courses
in Psychiatry, Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry were introduced. He
kept pace with all the developments in the global mental health scenario
and ensured that all important forms of treatment introduced in major
developed countries was brought to India. He was also successful in
blending Indian psychology with philosophy to understand human behaviour
better.In 1974, AIIMH and Mental Hospital were amalgamated, giving birth to
the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS).
With this, the legacy of Dr. Govindaswamy to implement a
multidisciplinary approach by integrating mental health and
neurosciences turned into a reality.
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