Internet addicts get
help from Beijing clinic
By AP
Monday, July 4, 2005
The 12 teenagers and young adults, some in ripped
jeans and baggy T-shirts, sit in a circle, chewing gum and
fidgeting as they shyly introduce themselves.
“I’m 12 years old,” one boy announces with
a smile. “I love playing computer games. That’s
it.”
“It’s been good to sleep,” says another,
a 17-year-old with spiky hair, now that he’s no longer
on the computer all day.
The youths are patients at China’s first officially
licensed clinic for Internet addiction, a downside of the
online frenzy that has accompanied the nation’s breathtaking
economic boom.
“All the children here have left school because they
are playing games or in chat rooms everyday,” says the
clinic’s director, Dr. Tao Ran. “They are suffering
from depression, nervousness, fear and unwillingness to interact
with others, panic and agitation. They also have sleep disorders,
the shakes and numbness in their hands.”
According to”government figures, China has the world’s
second-largest online population – 94 million –
after the United States.
While China promotes Internet use for business and education,
government officials also say Internet cafes are eroding public
morality. Authorities regularly shut down Internet cafes –
many illegally operated–– in crackdowns that also
include huge fines for their operators.
State media has also highlighted cases of obsessed Internet
gamers, some of whom have flunked out of school, committed
suicide or murder. Nonetheless, Internet cafes continue to
thrive, with outlets found in even the smallest and poorest
of villages. Most are usually packed late into the night.
Dr. Kimberly Young, a Bradford, Pennsylvania, clinical psychologist
whose 1998 book on Internet addiction has been translated
into Chinese, says she’s not surprised the Chinese would
face problems with Internet overuse.
“They are catching up with a lot of our technology,
and certainly at that juncture, are now able to run into some
of the same difficulties,” Young said.
While treatment programmes were virtually nonexistent in the
United States a decade ago, she said, dozens of clinics and
countless individual therapists such as herself offer counseling
and treatment in her country.
Various fixations
Programs are growing elsewhere, too. Just a few years ago,
Young says, she attended a conference in Switzerland where
she was the only American out of some 200 academics and clinicians
who gathered to address Internet addiction.
Tao’s government-owned clinic, which began taking patients
in March, occupies the top floor of a two-storey building
on a quiet, tree-lined street on the sprawling campus of the
Beijing Military Region Central Hospital, in the heart of
the Chinese capital.
A dozen nurses and 11 doctors care for the patients, mostly
youths aged 14 to 24, who have lost sleep, weight and friends,
after countless hours in front of the computer, often playing
video games with others, online.
Some come voluntarily, while others are checked in by their
parents. Many say their online obsessions helped them escape
day-to-day stress, especially pressure from parents to excel
in school.
Some can’t stop playing games, while the older ones
tend to be addicted to online chats with the opposite sex,
Tao says. Others are fixated on designing violent games.
Tao, a psychiatrist for 20 years who specialises in treating
addiction, estimates that up to 2.5 million Chinese suffer
from Internet addiction, though others are sceptical.
“As the number of the Netizens grows, the number of
the addicted people will grow as well, but we should not worry
about the issue too much,” says Kuang Wenbo, a professor
of mass media at Beijing’s Renmin University. “The
young men at the age of growing up have their own problems.
Even if there was no Internet they will get addicted to other
things.”
A reporter was allowed to talk to patients at the clinic on
condition they not be identified by name.
“I wasn’t normal,” said a 20-year-old man
from Beijing who used to spend at least 10 hours a day in
front of the screen playing hack-and-slash games like Diablo.
“In school I didn’t pay attention when teachers
were talking,” he said. “All I could do was think
about playing the next game. Playing made me happy, I forgot
my problems.”
The 12-year-old, a new arrival, spent four days in an Internet
cafe, barely eating or sleeping.
A soft-spoken 21-year-old man from northeastern Heilongjiang
province who had been in the clinic for 10 days said his addiction
had helped him escape from family pressures about his studies.
“I would stay up for 24 hours. I would eat only in front
of the computer,” he said.
Step-by-step
Tao’s team has put together a standard diagnostic test
to determine whether someone is addicted, then uses a combination
of therapy sessions, medication, acupuncture and sports like
swimming and basketball, to ease patients back into normal
lives.
They usually stay 10 to 15 days, at $48 a day – a high
price in China, where the average city dweller’s weekly
income is just $20.
The routine begins around 6 a.m. and includes sessions on
a machine that stimulates nerve impulses with 30-volt charges
to pressure points.
Some patients receive a clear fluid through intravenous drips
said to “adjust the unbalanced status of brain secretions,”
according to one nurse. Officials would not give any other
details about the medication.
Patients also nap, write diary entries or play cards. Their
rooms are sunny, each decorated with artificial flowers, Winnie
the Pooh comforters and a 17-inch television.
Tao says the long-term effects of treatment are generally
successful, but it’s not easy to keep patients from
again giving themselves over to Internet temptation.
“It would be hard to give it up completely,” said
the 20-year-old from Beijing. “I’ll take it step-by-step.”
–AP
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