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“The future of journalism is small, intimate and personal,” says Indian journalist who’s writing about mental health on Substack
Tanmoy Goswami was the world’s first sanity correspondent. Now he’s creating a platform to highlight these issues in the Global South
Indian journalist Tanmoy Goswami.
Monday 19 April 2021
Tanmoy Goswami was the world’s first sanity correspondent. The New Delhi-based, former business journalist covered the marginalisation of low and middle-income countries in the global mental health movement for
The Correspondent until the end of 2020.
His journalism is driven by personal experience of living with depression, anxiety and self-harm, but also by the desire to address global mental health crises and the emerging needs of India’s burgeoning youth population. In this interview, Goswami explains why mental health journalism matters and what journalists and news publishers can do in the Global South in this field.
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Illustration by Raj Verma
In 2009, a 24-year-old employee of Singapore-based software-as-a-service (Saas) customer engagement firm Capillary Technologies went on a holiday and didn t return. It was found that he had a break-up and had committed suicide. Two years on, a similar incident occurred in the company. He was 23, looked happy and was doing quite well in the organisation. In fact, we had moved him to Mumbai, says Aneesh Reddy, Co-founder and CEO. The firm is still not sure what happened in this case though. Generally we hire a batch of 5-10 freshers from campus, but no one from his cohort knew, adds Reddy.