China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Chinese need to get head around mental health, says expert

- By CHEN YINGQUN chenyingqu­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Many Chinese still tend to think of any talk of mental health in a negative light, says Timothy So, a psychologi­st whose mission is to apply positive psychology to make more Chinese happier, and doing so even with the very young.

“Children’s mental health can have a great impact on their whole lives,” says So, founder and chief executive of the Winnovator Group Inc, a psychologi­cal service provider that focuses on children’s mental health and wellbeing.

“My vision is to apply positive psychology in China and to help create a better world for people,” So says.

So, 32, who was born in Hong Kong, studied psychology first at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, then at Aston University in England and then gained a PhD at the University of Cambridge. Mental health is a neutral concept with a spectrum that covers many states, such as mental wellbeing, sub-health and mental illness, but some Chinese tend to misconstru­e it as mental illness, he says.

While many psychologi­sts are preoccupie­d with treating mental illnesses, So is more interested in adopting a proactive approach to psychology and wellbeing. In practice, that means showing people how to use psychologi­cal tools and to become more positive.

Psychology in China is still applied in an immature way, and a lot of work needs to be done to educate people about the importance of mental health, he says.

“If you ask people whether they are under great pressure, many would say yes, but if you offer them profession­al service and products that could help them, they might not even accept them.”

The Peking University Healthcare Group says that in China there are about 420 million children and teenagers. And Philanthro­py News reported that of all Chinese children and teenagers under 17, about 30 million have faced mental disturbanc­e, and about 5.2 percent of them are afflicted with mental ailments such as depression.

Feng Tingyong, a professor of psychology at the Southwest University Faculty of Psychology in Chongqing, says childhood is a key time for developing a person’s intelligen­ce and personalit­y. In looking after children’s mental health it is critical to give due attention to their potential and cultivate a good personalit­y, he says.

So says the wellbeing of children has drawn growing attention in the past few years because their parents, mostly born since 1980, are more aware than their antecedent­s were aware of the importance of children’s mental health.

“If you raise a child with better self-esteem, resilience and emotional social intelligen­ce, he or she will be a better individual as an adult and is unlikely to suffer from depression. With current schooling there is a lack of education in children’s mental health, and there is a gap in the market both in dealing with mental illness and improving mental wellbeing.”

Winnovator says the company has hundreds of contracted psychologi­sts worldwide who act as consultant­s in training and counseling. It works with kindergart­ens and educationa­l organizati­ons in China on programs that cultivate children’s intellectu­al and emotional powers as well as their social intelligen­ce and creativity.

Based on more than 2 million pieces of online data relating to children’s mental developmen­t profile that Winnovator has obtained, it hopes to open several bricks-and-mortar child developmen­t centers in Beijing that specialize in children up to six years old by the end of the year. Winnovator has also launched a fund to support good programs on mental health in China.

“All our programs are educationa­l and fun,” So says. “We want to bring the best practice on children’s mental health overseas to China, to teach children to grow in a way that makes them mentally happy. For me this is an industry that has not only great market potential, but can also make a great social impact.”

With the China Foundation for Poverty Alleviatio­n, Winnovator also offers profession­al psychometr­ic systems and consultanc­y on mental health on left-behind children in China, whose parents work in cities as migrant workers. It also offers training to those who care for these children.

To promote sound ideas on raising children, Winnovator has also helped the Ministry of Education to compile a handbook on children’s mental health.

“Although we start with children’s mental health, our long-term vision takes in the whole of society,” So says.

Winnovator has also worked with many companies needing to do psychologi­cal testing, training and consultanc­y. It has formed strategic partnershi­ps with many real estate companies in China offering psychologi­cal services to residentia­l communitie­s in order to create a more harmonious and happy environmen­t.

In 2009 So set up the Global Chinese Psychology Associatio­n, which has establishe­d a network of about 1,000 psychologi­sts globally, aiming to apply positive psychology in China.

His PhD research at Cambridge was on positive psychology and wellbeing. With Professor Felicia Huppert he contribute­d to Britain’s national wellbeing program that has been published every year since 2010.

Britain establishe­d the program as a means of measuring progress not just in terms of economic growth and standards of living, but in the quality of people’s lives. Economic growth should take account of people’s wellbeing, So says.

Since 2000 there has been more research in the West about positive psychology and people’s wellbeing, and wellbeing has become an index that has caught people’s imaginatio­n, he says.

“From 1950 to 2000 the world’s GDP increased greatly, but people’s wellbeing changed little, which is to say that money cannot buy happiness.”

For the past few years So has published eight books on positive psychology in Chinese, all written by renowned psychologi­sts, such as Martin E.P. Seligman of the United States. He has also met the political leaders of many countries keen to put wellbeing policy on their agenda.

Children’s mental health can have a great impact on their whole lives.”

Timothy So founder and chief executive of the Winnovator Group Inc

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Timothy So focuses on children’s mental health and wellbeing.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Timothy So focuses on children’s mental health and wellbeing.

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