India, July 12 -- Anxiety, depression, burnout, loneliness, low self-esteem - these are all part of mainstream discussions today on social media and in the public sphere, yet access to professional help and therapists is a pain point that technology has not completely solved.
Even if there is a lot less stigma around seeking help for mental wellbeing today than a decade ago, this has not addressed the accessibility barrier or even affordability, leaving millions of Indians outside the scope of mental health counselling.
Dozens of mental health apps have tried to break through, but it's a problem that's persistent - therapy is not cheap and no app has been able to bridge the gap yet. When Krishna Veer Singh and Tarun Gupta decided to lau...
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