China faces huge challenges
in prevention and control of mental health problems, experts and
officials warned Tuesday.
Mental and neural diseases are the most costly
diseases in China, accounting for 20 percent of medical spending,
the Ministry of Health revealed yesterday.
Poverty, the lack of medical insurance for millions of
sufferers, substandard medical service and poor public awareness
are the main issues of concern, said Mao Qun'an, spokesman of the
ministry.
Furthermore, no nationwide investigation has been
undertaken to find out exactly how many people are suffering from
mental illness.
Ministry estimates indicate China has in the region of
16 million people suffering from mental illnesses, such as
schizophrenia and depression.
The country has 6 million epilepsy
sufferers.
There are about 30 million youngsters aged under 17 in
China who suffer from various psychological problems, such as
depression, caused by heavy study burden.
"China has a number of problems in tackling mental
diseases, both in the medical treatment field and in intervention,"
Mao said at a press conference yesterday on the 15th World Mental
Health Day.
One difficulty is that China has a serious shortfall
of qualified psychiatrists, Mao said.
The total number of professional mental doctors is
20,000. Among them, only 6,000 people have got undergraduate-level
education, said Yu Xin, director of Peking University Institute of
Mental Health.
In south China's Guangdong Province, there is a desperate
shortage of psychiatrists.
"The province has only got about 2,000 psychiatrists,
while 1.2 million people need mental health treatment," said Jia
Fujun, director of Guangdong Mental Health Research
Institute.
"That means 600 patients have to share one
doctor."
And the quantity and quality of mental hospitals are
also far from adequate, Yu said.
"Mental hospitals are usually located in suburban,
rural or even remote areas, because people regard mental health
sufferers as dangerous and think they should be kept
away."
Another obstacle stopping patients receiving medical
treatment is poverty.
About 80 per cent of rural residents and 40 percent of
urbanites have no medical insurance.
For example, Beijing has 130,000 registered "severely
psychotic" patients, but 70 percent of them have no access to free
medicine and about 60 percent are not receiving medical care due to
a lack of medical professionals and funds, the municipal health
bureau said earlier this year.
"In China, HIV/AIDS and TB sufferers can get free
medical treatment. But mental disease patients, who can put great
pressure on and pose potential danger to their families and
society, cannot receive free care," Yu said.
In early 2005, the central government launched a
program in 30 provinces and regions to help poor people suffering
serious mental illnesses get care and treatment.
A total of 60 pilot sites, half of them in rural
areas, have been established. In every site 1,000 patients are
registered and given free medical treatment.
A total of 10 million yuan (US$1.2 million) was
invested in the program, which will end in December.
Moreover, as society continues to undergo dramatic
change many new mental problems will surface, Yu said. He noted
that anxiety, depression, and other disorders caused by bad life
habits including drug and alcohol abuse, are affecting more and
more people.
Experts estimate that 100 million people in the
country may be suffering from different mental diseases and
disorders, Xinhua News Agency reported in late
September.
In north China's Hebei Province, a survey conducted on 24,000
people aged over 18 showed the total incidence of "mental disease"
was 14 percent. More women were suffering than men, and more rural
residents suffering than urbanites.
(China Daily October 11,
2006)
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