{"id":155413,"date":"2013-05-01T17:49:32","date_gmt":"2013-05-02T00:49:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=155413"},"modified":"2013-05-01T17:49:32","modified_gmt":"2013-05-02T00:49:32","slug":"new-mental-health-law-comes-into-effect","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2013\/05\/new-mental-health-law-comes-into-effect\/","title":{"rendered":"New Mental Health Law Comes Into Effect"},"content":{"rendered":"
China’s first mental health law, passed by the National People’s Congress Standing Committee last October<\/a> after attempts spanning almost 30 years, came into effect on May 1st. Besides protecting patient privacy and at least acknowledging the need for more resources, the law has been hailed for addressing the problem of wrongful institutionalization<\/strong><\/a>, increasingly used as a weapon by local authorities against petitioners and protesters. From Bai Tiantian at Global Times:<\/p>\n “The law is the first in China that defines the concept, the standard and the procedure of ‘involuntary medical treatment’ in an effort to prevent healthy and innocent people from being wrongly diagnosed as ‘insane’ and placed against their will in a mental hospital,” Zhou Zijun, a professor with Peking University’s School of Public Health, told the Global Times.<\/p>\n The law has attracted a lot of attention since its draft was submitted for discussion last year. Although there are no official records on the number of people wrongly institutionalized, Xinhua has reported that such cases have increased over the past few years.<\/p>\n [\u2026] According to the law, the decision whether to admit a patient in a mental hospital should be based on a diagnosis made by licensed psychiatrists rather than law enforcement departments. The diagnosis must be verified by two independent professionals should the family of the patient demand a re-evaluation. <\/p>\n [\u2026] But some feel it does not go far enough. “This newly released law is only a general guideline and does not answer detailed questions such as how to determine the consent of a potentially mentally ill person,” said Zhang Xinkai, a senior psychiatrist from the Shanghai Mental Health Center.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n BBC Monitoring rounded up more Chinese media commentary on the new law<\/strong><\/a>:<\/p>\n Southern Metropolis Daily questions the impact of the law, saying it gives the guardian too much power. As a result, it will not protect people from being sent for treatment forcibly.<\/p>\n It is yet to be seen whether the law will terminate the practice of “being mentally ill-ed”, the paper says.<\/p>\n “Being mentally ill-ed”, a buzzword in today’s papers, is a situation where a mentally sound person is pronounced ill by others, quite often by family members over personal grudges, and forced to stay in hospital.<\/p>\n [\u2026] The website of China National Radio carries an article titled “Expert elaborates on how to avoid being mentally ill-ed”.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n (Perry Link and CDT founder Xiao Qiang explained this “involuntary passive” idiom<\/a> in a Wall Street Journal op-ed in January.)<\/p>\n\n
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