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Nearly 18% of Chinese Suffer from Various Mental Disorders: Study

by VR Sreeraman on May 1 2010 12:14 PM

A national survey has found that mental disorders are becoming a major public health problem in China, with about 17.

 Nearly 18% of Chinese Suffer from Various Mental Disorders: Study
A national survey has found that mental disorders are becoming a major public health problem in China, with about 17.5 percent of Chinese adults suffering from different forms of the illness.
The Beijing Suicide Research and Prevention Center at Beijing Huilongguan Hospital and five other local institutions on mental disorder research in Zhejiang, Shandong, Qinghai and Gansu provinces conducted the survey, reports China Daily.

It found that rural residents suffer a higher prevalence of mental disorders than urban residents, and that mental disorders include mood disorders, anxiety disorders and substance abuse.

The study was based on interviews of 113 million respondents, covering 12 percent of all adults in the country above 18 years old in 96 cities and 267 rural areas of four provinces including Zhejiang, Shandong, Qinghai, and Gansu.

The survey revealed that people above 40 years old have higher rates than people who are under 40, and that female adults suffered higher rates of mood disorder and anxiety disorder than men.

But for alcohol abuse, the rate among men is 38 times that among women.

According to the survey, people from different provinces suffer different forms of mental disorders due to their specific characters and local customs.

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"In Gansu and Shandong provinces, people suffer severely from alcohol abuse since many of them really love to drink heavily due to their forthright and uninhibited nature," Li Xianyun, director of the Beijing Suicide Research and Prevention Center at Beijing Huilongguan Hospital, said.

Li said mental disorders have become a common public health issue. However, only a few people have realized the necessity of treatment.

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The survey showed that less than 11 percent of people with mental disorders in Shandong have received treatment, and the rate is even lower in Qinghai, where only 3 percent went to hospital.

"Most people who have mental disorders may not even know it, and some even try to cover it up since they have been looked down upon by society for such a long time," she said.

"This kind of situation occurs especially in developing countries, including China," she stated.

The survey lasted from 2001 to 2005 and was the third of its kind in China. The previous two were conducted in 1982 and 1993.

"Based on statistics from the research, policy makers in the public health sector will know the real reasons why many people with mental disorders have not received treatment in different provinces, such as in Qinghai, where only one hospital can provide treatment for mental disorders," Li said.

"Building more hospitals and training more doctors are imminent.

"In most other provinces in China, helping people cast away misunderstanding toward mental disorders and getting disorders treated is the future task," she added.

Source-ANI
SRM


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