Abstract
Psychiatric practice in high-income countries typically relies on implicit triage pathways that filter patients through primary and stepped care before specialist review. In many low- and middle-income settings, however, psychiatrists manage the entire spectrum of distress without such filters. This absence reshapes hierarchies of severity, alters diagnostic and ethical reasoning and influences how clinical priority is determined. Drawing on practice realities from India, this article argues that severity in such systems becomes a dynamic and socially negotiated construct rather than a fixed clinical category. Without institutional thresholds, urgency may become performative: social visibility, family advocacy and the ability to articulate distress can influence prioritization more than clinical need, producing a pattern of reverse triage, in which socially mediated visibility displaces genuine urgency. Language compatibility may further intensify this dynamic, as patients unable to communicate in the clinician's working language risk remaining unheard in undifferentiated clinical spaces. As mental health systems worldwide face rising demand and limited capacity, these observations highlight triage not as exclusion but as an ethical mechanism for balancing equity of access with fairness of prioritization.