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    Mental health issues addressed

    2012-09-25 08:54 China Daily     Web Editor: Wang YuXia comment

    Zhao Xin spends most of his spare time online, playing video games or aimlessly surfing the Internet. He is not a huge fan of the online world, but it takes his mind off the depression that has consumed his life in recent years.

    "I have been very depressed and I don't know how to pull myself out of it. I don't want to talk to anyone. Playing games online diverts my mind from it for a while, but afterwards the depression takes over again," said Zhao Xin (not his real name), a Shanghai college student who was diagnosed with mild depression earlier this year and now receives regular treatment.

    Zhao was depressed for two years without help before a counselor at his college advised him to seek treatment.

    His story is not uncommon. A recent survey conducted in Shanghai found 44 percent of respondents would not seek help when dealing with mental health issues. For people under 20, the Internet is a common escape.

    The survey, conducted by Shanghai Health Promotion Committee, included more than 3,500 city residents aged between 15 and 70. A total of 20 percent said they suffer from depression and feel helpless to do anything about it.

    According to Wu Xiaoyu, an official from the Shanghai Health Promotion Committee, "many young people fail to recognize mental health problems and escape the turbulence in their lives through the Internet and video games."

    Less than 44 percent of participants had any knowledge of mental health issues, and 75 percent were unable to recognize signs of a mental health problem. And less than 5 percent of people surveyed said they would seek psychological help from the community, professional health body or social organization. Family and work colleagues instead were cited as the most common sources to turn to for help.

    Wu said a social support system should be established to meet the growing demand for mental health services.

    Zhao Xudong, an expert from the China Association for Mental Health, spoke about the growing issue at the third Chinese Psychoanalytic Congress, which closed over the weekend in Shanghai. 

    The three-day event was jointly organized by the Shanghai Mental Health Center and the Psychoanalytic Committee of Chinese Mental Health Association.

    "With the remarkable social and economic changes in China in recent decades, people are under much more psychological pressure than before, and as a result, demand for mental health services is rising," he said.

    There is an urgent demand for qualified therapists and a professional approach to the issue, Zhao Xudong told the event audience.

    "Psychoanalysis is an important foundation in clinical approaches. An increasing number of clinicians in mental health hospitals are now combining psychological therapy with medication in their clinical work," said Qiu Jianyin, director of the psychology department at Shanghai Mental Health Center affiliated with Shanghai Jiao Tong University.

    But the absence of a comprehensive system for training and assessing psychotherapists remains a major hurdle to dealing with mental health issues, Qiu said.

    "Clinics providing mental health counseling services can be found widely across the country, but not all of them are of a good standard. There is still much to do," Qiu added. 

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