The notion that whatever you do to her, the jinn experiences it too, and if that's bad enough, the jinn will leave her. Just think of her things would be in a country where schizophrenia is not recognized and possession is believed to the reason for the symptoms
I remember one patient, particularly his father, who would bring bottles of water tahliil( which were blessed by the local imams). His dad even wanted the Quran Kitab in his son's room and even went nuts when we refused to force his son to go to exorcisms, which he was trying put together. His son didn't even wanted to go. The dad came up with the idea that the jinns need to be beaten out of his son and spoke of people back home being jealous of his son attending University and this being the consequences of a curse
He was treated with antipsychotic medication and recovered well enough to go home to continue his life and one day becomes a Pharmacists......Pharmacology of all things . Hopefully he grows up and gets a degree and possibly explain to his dad how the medication helped him teat his ill problems and that everything his dad did were done to make his father feel good about trying
It's challenging for mental health services to educate people, it even overturns into physical care, hinders diagnoses and makes things harder for effective treatment........I have seen iMAMS reconcile with the beliefs in jinns and the existence of mental illness and are able to give spiritual comfort to those receiving evidence based diagnosed conditions..
Change is happening, just at glacial pace