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Internet addiction in China: Some teens harshly treated

Security Strategies Alert By M. E. Kabay, Network World
December 23, 2009 02:46 PM ET
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Internet growth in China has been phenomenal. According to the Miniwatts Marketing Group's "Internet World Stats," between 2000 and 2009, the estimated number of Internet users in the People's Republic grew from 23 million to 338 million and the penetration percentage grew from 1.7% to 25.3%.

Inevitably, some people have started to exceed other people's views on what is reasonable for daily use of the Internet. The concept of "Internet addiction" has been used as the basis for psychiatric, medical and even punitive treatment.

In the capital region, parents have been bringing teenagers to the Addiction Medical Center (AMC) at the General Hospital of the Beijing Military Region for several years. An article by Richard Stone from June 2009 in SCIENCE magazine [subscription or payment required for online access] quotes Dr. Tao Ran, "a psychiatrist and senior colonel" in describing how the children are treated:

AMC's treatments include behavioral training, drug therapy for patients with mental symptoms, dancing and sports, reading, karaoke, and elements of the "12 step" program of Alcoholics Anonymous. A "very important" part of the regimen is family therapy, says Tao. "Internet addiction occurs because the parents are doing something wrong," he asserts. Patients tend to have parents who are strict authoritarians or demand perfection, or come from single-parent households or homes in which the parents are frequently fighting, Tao says. In the beginning, parents tend to blame their children, he says, but after treatment they recognize their failings.

In contrast, a number of unregulated clinics in China have become the focus of concern within the country and among outside observers. Some of these clinics sound more like punitive boot camps than supportive institutions.

The most infamous, perhaps, is the Yang Yongxin Center for IA Treatment at public hospital number four in Linyi, Shandong. Last year [2008], a CCTV-12 ["a central government channel"] segment recounted how the parents of a young man, "H," drugged him with a dozen sleeping pills and brought him to Yang's clinic. After "H" had woken up, he protested to Yang that he was over 18 years old and therefore they could not force him to stay without his consent. Yang bundled "H" into a room, and other patients restrained him on a bed, after which Yang administered shocks— for more than 1 hour, the narrator claimed — with a DX-IIA electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) machine, clearly shown in the program. In an May 8 article in China Youth Daily, Yang explained that he uses a weaker current than standard ECT and that the shocks, although "very painful," are "harmless."

In July 2009, Chinese federal authorities ordered investigations into the electro-shock treatments and ordered them suspended.

The Ministry of Health has ordered a hospital in Shandong Province to stop using electric shock therapy to cure young people of Internet addiction, saying there was no scientific evidence that it worked.

Linyi Mental Health Hospital in Shandong used the treatment as part of a four-month program that had so far treated nearly 3,000 young people, China Youth Daily reported yesterday, citing psychiatrist Yang Yongxin who runs the facility.

M. E. Kabay, PhD, CISSP-ISSMP, specializes in security and operations management consulting services and teaching. He is Chief Technical Officer of Adaptive Cyber Security Instruments, Inc. and Associate Professor of Information Assurance in the School of Business and Management at Norwich University. Visit his Web site for white papers and course materials.

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