Just a few years ago, conversations about psychotherapy in Kazakhstan were conducted in hushed tones, as if acknowledging “weakness” or personal failure. Today, mental health is gradually entering the public sphere: teenagers seek support, parents attend training sessions, and adults increasingly view therapy as a practical tool for emotional self-regulation.
Alongside this cultural shift, the support infrastructure is expanding. At the same time, the state’s role is growing, with authorities publicly emphasizing quality control, from creating a registry of specialists and setting educational requirements to introducing digital tools for early risk detection in children.
Normalization as a New Stage
The most significant change in recent years has been in public perception. Psychotherapy is increasingly regarded not as a “last resort,” but as a routine service, comparable to consulting a doctor or lawyer, but focused on emotions and behavior. Seeking professional help is gradually ceasing to signal a crisis and is becoming part of everyday self-care.
This shift has been gradual. For many years, the psychological support market developed spontaneously through private practice and online consultations, without unified standards or regulatory oversight. At the same time, public attitudes evolved from caution and stigma in the post-Soviet period to a more pragmatic and open approach to mental health.
Changes are particularly visible where access to support has become less accessible. On December 1, 2024, schools introduced a system of anonymous text appeals via QR codes. By February 2025, 25,000 messages from teenagers had been recorded.
Similar dynamics are observed at the “111” contact center. While 17,000 calls from children were received in 2024, since the beginning of 2025, 110,999 appeals have been registered, most submitted via QR codes.
The increase in these figures reflects not only the scale of existing problems but also a lower threshold for seeking help. When support is accessible anonymously and quickly, teenagers are more likely to take the first step. Simplified access is becoming a key driver behind the emerging “normalization” of psychological assistance.
Statistics and Personal Experience: Changing Attitudes Toward Therapy
Growing demand for psychological support reflects broader social pressures and the prevalence of mental health conditions. According to the World Health Organization, globally, depression affects approximately 4% of the population, with regional variations.
Kazakhstani analytical publications referencing international comparisons have cited comparable or slightly higher estimates, suggesting that depressive disorders may affect up to 4.4% of the population, approximately 732,700 people nationwide.
System capacity indicators also highlight pressure on services. Data from mental health centers indicate that more than 300,000 individuals are registered in such institutions. Public statements have drawn attention to staffing shortages among psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers. Official workload standards reportedly provide for one psychiatrist (including narcology specialists) per 20,000 registered residents and one child psychiatrist, psychotherapist, psychologist, or social worker per 60,000 people.
Children represent a particularly sensitive category. According to data from the Ministry of Health published by Kazinform, 204,408 people are registered with mental disorders (excluding psychoactive substance use), including 44,781 minors. A diagnosis of schizophrenia is recorded for 39,334 individuals, including 301 children. In 2024, child psychiatry infrastructure comprised 613 specialized beds nationwide, 573 in 20 regional mental health centers, and 40 at the national level.
These statistics primarily reflect the severe medical segment of mental health care, where resource constraints are most acute. At the same time, a parallel segment exists: individuals seeking psychologists not due to formal diagnoses, but because of stress, burnout, or family conflict.
Interviews with clients illustrate shifting attitudes.
Sanzhar Uvashev, 24, a marketer from Almaty, says he first consulted a specialist after experiencing severe burnout:
“Before, it seemed like you only go to a psychologist if something is ‘really serious.’ But when I realized I couldn’t cope with anxiety and insomnia, I decided to try. In my circle, no one is surprised anymore; they rather ask for contacts.”
Altair Ospanov, 28, an entrepreneur from Astana, describes overcoming an internal barrier “as if it were a weakness. It felt like I had to cope on my own: business, responsibility, decisions, everything was on me. At some point, I realized the fatigue was accumulating, and my thoughts were going in circles.”
He adds that the experience proved practical rather than dramatic: “I’m used to investing in business development: training, consultations, strategies. And I realized a psychologist is roughly in the same category. It’s an investment in yourself and your resilience.”
Valeria Kuznetsova, 22, a student from Astana, sought help after relocating:
“It was hard to adapt; I felt lonely. A friend said it’s normal to see a specialist and just talk. I didn’t feel any stigma. On the contrary, it became easier.”
These accounts do not negate systemic challenges, but they illustrate a broader trend: for part of the urban population, seeking psychological support is no longer taboo. Alongside concerning medical statistics, preventive and supportive psychology is gradually becoming part of everyday life.
The State Changes the Rules: Registry, Licensing, and Digital Prevention
As demand for psychological services grows, so does the question of standards and trust: who provides these services, and under what qualifications?
In 2025, proposals to introduce licensing for coaches and psychologists were actively debated. Some members of the professional community supported stricter standards to reduce unqualified practice, while others warned against excessive bureaucracy.
At the beginning of 2026, the discussion entered the legislative phase. The Mazhilis (Kazakh parliament) began reviewing a draft law on psychological assistance, with the creation of a state registry of psychologists as one of its key components.
According to publicly reported provisions, entry into the profession would require profile education, professional retraining, and confirmation of qualifications. One description of the draft law states that psychological assistance could be provided by individuals with higher and/or postgraduate pedagogical or medical education who have completed at least 900 hours of retraining and are included in the state registry. A transitional period is reportedly under discussion for practicing specialists to formalize their credentials.
The draft also outlines ethical standards and client interaction procedures. Informed consent must be obtained before services begin, and separate permission would be required for audio or video recording of sessions. The reform’s stated aim is to limit market access for individuals lacking proper training and to enhance transparency through a unified registry.
Particular attention is paid to the online segment, where consultations via social networks have become widespread. Regulators argue that increased digital activity, especially among children and adolescents, necessitates clearer standards and oversight.
Simultaneously, the state is investing in digital prevention tools within the public system. In January 2026, reports announced the creation of a unified digital platform for psychological diagnostics and support for children. The system is designed for early identification of psychological and behavioral risks, longitudinal monitoring, and coordinated care pathways without duplication across agencies.
The platform is linked to the national Child Protection Concept for 2026-2030, described at the governmental level as a comprehensive framework integrating existing tools, including the “111” contact center and psychological support centers, with new mechanisms such as additional assistance offices and the introduction of a dedicated “school psychologist hour.”
Overall, the state appears to be shifting from reactive measures toward a more structured system: professional regulation through registries and educational requirements; organizational coordination through institutional networks; and digital prevention through monitoring platforms.
The effectiveness of these reforms, however, will depend on balance. While registries and qualification standards may enhance transparency and client protection, mental health services fundamentally rely on trust, confidentiality, and accessibility. Maintaining this balance will be the central test of Kazakhstan’s evolving policy on psychological assistance.
