The Phnom Penh Post

China vows to end electrosho­ck therapy for net addicts

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internet addiction showing signs of lasting psychologi­cal trauma, he said.

“They didn’t talk, were afraid to meet people and refused to leave their homes,” he said, referring to his meetings with the teenagers. “They were panicked even to hear the word ‘hospital’ and ‘doctor’.”

Qu Xinjiu, a law professor at China University of Political Science and Law in Beijing, said the belief that parents have supreme jurisdicti­on over their children, and that even police officers have no right to intervene in family affairs, is widespread in China.

“That’s why there are so many parents sending their kids for elect roshock t herapy, even when outsiders think it’s wrong to do so,” Qu said.

Figures on the number or growth of internet detox camps in China are scarce, but the camps’ methods have been generating concern for years.

The legislatio­n would also limit how much time each day that minors could play online games at home or in internet bars. Providers of the games would be obliged to take measures to monitor and restrict use, such as requiring players to register under their real names.

The law does not yet specify the number of hours allowed, but minors would be prohibited from play ing online games any where between midnight and 8am

Tao said he doubted that the draft law, which was introduced by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, could be enforced evenly nationwide. Provisions to limit the number of hours spent online probably could be easily flouted, he said.

Reports in the Chinese news media this week said that lawmakers would accept public comments on the draft law through early February but gave no indication of when it might be put into practice.

In 2009, the Chinese Health Ministry issued guidelines against using electrosho­ck therapy for internet addicts. Trent M Bax, the author of Youth and Internet Addiction in China, said that he wondered whether a ban would be any more effective.

Despite the Health Ministry’s policy, “punitive practices continue to victimise China’s youth” in internet detox camps, said Bax, an assistant professor of sociology at EwhaWomans University in Seoul, South Korea.

Researcher­s from Chinese, Taiwanese and German universiti­es wrote in the journal AsiaPacifi­c Psychiatry in 2014 that the highest prevalence of “problemati­c internet use” worldwide had been observed in Asia. Christian Montag, the study’s lead author, said in an email on Thursday that South Korea had the world’s highest rate of problemati­c internet use, in part because of its large technology sector and online game market. South Korea also offers camps for internet addiction.

Recent scientific evidence indicates that the best treatments for digital addiction appear to be cognitive behavioral therapy in individual and group settings, which often include patients’ parents and significan­t others, said Daria J Kuss, a specialist on internet and game addiction at Nottingham Trent University in Britain.

Kuss said medication can also be effective, especially if internet addiction is accompanie­d by anxiety or mood disorders, such as depression. But, she said, beatings and electrosho­ck therapy “are not commonly used in the treatment of internet and gaming addiction and are to be considered unethical and inhumane.”

 ?? LIU JIN/AFP ?? A man browses the internet in Beijing in 2011.
LIU JIN/AFP A man browses the internet in Beijing in 2011.
 ?? SEYLLOU/AFP ?? Gambia’s president-elect Adama Barrow.
SEYLLOU/AFP Gambia’s president-elect Adama Barrow.

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