A new law has taken effect prohibiting Chinese from being committed
to mental hospitals without their consent in an attempt to prevent
"forced detentions", state-run media said Thursday.
China's first
mental health law comes after right groups accused authorities of
locking up hundreds of thousands of people in psychiatric hospitals each
year, often as a form of punishment for dissidents.
The new
regulation, which took effect Wednesday, "aims to stop mental hospitals
from admitting patients against their will, a practice that previously
triggered public outrage amid accusations of forced detentions", the
Global Times said.
It "requires Chinese psychiatric facilities to gain consent from mentally ill patients before taking them in for treatment".
Mental
hospitals will also have to obtain patients' permission to administer
treatment and respect their requests to be discharged.
The law
will not apply, however, to "those with conditions severe enough to
warrant guardianship or who have the potential to harm themselves or
others", the Global Times said.
The group Chinese Human Rights
Defenders said in a report last August that the hundreds of thousands of
people committed involuntarily to mental hospitals each year include
activists, dissidents and petitioners.
The powerful and wealthy
can also abuse the system to lock up opponents, it said, adding that
patients are subject to forced medical treatment and physical abuse such
as electric shocks.
File photo shows a patient at a pyschiatric hospital (AFP/File, Jean-Philippe Ksiazek)
They are often barred from contacting family
members or lawyers and stand little chance of arguing their case in
court, the report said.
A psychiatrist quoted in the Global Times
called the new measure an important step but questioned how effectively
it could be carried out.
The law "does not answer detailed
questions such as how to determine the consent of a potentially mentally
ill person", it cited Zhang Xinkai, of the Shanghai Mental Health
Centre, as saying.
Source : AFP , 2nd May 2013
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