A key meeting was recently held between Prof. Dr. Rabia Khawar, Chairperson, Department of Applied Psychology, Government College University Faisalabad, and Dr. Owais Karim, Assistant Professor & Head of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Nishtar Hospital Multan. The meeting aimed to review progress and foster deeper collaboration on the ongoing HEC-funded project titled:
“Patterns of Risk and Protective Factors in Intergenerational Transfer of Mental Illness” (HEC-GCF-844).
Introduction of New Project Personnel: A formal introduction of the new data collection team working under the GCF-844 project.
Performance Evaluation: Monitoring and reviewing the field performance and ethics of current data collectors.
Strategic Discussion: Both institutions explored new avenues for collaboration across various domains in psychology and psychiatry.
Future Planning: Discussion extended beyond the current project scope, focusing on sustained partnerships and further joint initiatives.
This multi-phase research investigates how mental illness is transferred across generations in Pakistan. The project focuses on both risk and protective factors — including social, familial, and psychological variables — and aims to:
Develop a Family Assessment System (FAS) for identifying vulnerable youth.
Create and validate indigenous social capital measures.
Analyze internalizing and externalizing behavioral problems in children of mentally ill parents (COPMI).
Explore resilience factors and the role of parental acceptance/rejection.
Children of parents with mental illness (COPMI) show significantly more emotional and behavioral challenges than their peers.
Maternal neglect and paternal lack of warmth are key predictors of both externalizing and internalizing problems.
Social capital, resilience, and adaptive coping mechanisms emerged as crucial protective factors.
Caregivers, especially women, reported higher perceived stigma and lower quality of life.
Valid and reliable tools were developed and standardized, including the Family Assessment Scale and multiple social capital scales.
Over 7 psychological scales developed and validated.
Workshops and training sessions for field researchers and mental health professionals.
Dissemination of findings via national/international conferences and journal publications.
Development of Hybrid-Psychosocial resources for COPMI and caregivers.
This collaborative effort marks a significant step toward bridging psychology and psychiatry in Pakistan, enhancing the nation’s capacity to support mental health across generations.