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Christopher Lane is the Pearce Miller Research Professor of Literature at Northwestern University and the author of Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness. See full bio

China To Stop Shock Therapy On Internet Addicts

China has been using electric shock therapy to treat overuse of the Internet.

(Photo: Chua Chin Hon, Straits Times, Singapore)

The Associated Press is reporting a breaking story about the use of electric shock therapy on 3,000 Chinese youths. The article appears below and, for obvious reasons, it is lighting up the web—no irony intended among web users, I'm sure.

I wrote about overuse of the Internet in an earlier post, voicing dissent with the American Psychiatric Association's apparent interest in representing the behavior as a mental illness. The piece drew on an excellent article in the New York Times, which focused on treatment centers in South Korea that address this phenomenon without medication or, let it be said, electric shock treatment. Certainly, South Korea's approach does seem better-informed, not to say more ... humane.

www.christopherlane.org

 

By HENRY SANDERSON - 9 hours ago

BEIJING (AP) - China's Health Ministry has ordered a hospital to stop using electric shock therapy to cure youths of Internet addiction, saying there was no scientific evidence it worked.

Linyi Mental Health Hospital in eastern Shandong province used the treatment as part of a four-month program that has so far treated nearly 3,000 youths, the China Youth Daily newspaper has reported, citing the psychiatrist who runs it, Yang Yongxin.

The ministry said in a statement posted on its Web site late Monday there is no domestic or international clinical evidence that electric shock therapy helps cure Internet addiction. Electric shock therapy is most often used to treat severe depression.

Chinese psychologists say symptoms of Internet addiction include being online more than six hours a day - playing games and looking at pornography rather than working or studying - and getting angry when unable to get online.

The hospital could not be reached for comment Tuesday, but spokesman Yang Shuyun told the Beijing News newspaper had stopped administering the shock therapy after seeing the ministry's comments.

Shuyun said it was only part of the overall program to treat patients, which also included medicine and psychological counseling. Patients are charged 5,500 yuan ($805) a month.

Computer and Internet use has risen dramatically as China's economy has boomed in recent years, and according to an estimate by China's National People's Congress about 10 percent of the country's under-18 users are addicted to the Internet, although it is not recognized as a clinical condition.

Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

The London Guardian describes the ordeal of the treatment here.



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