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China bans controversial electric-shock therapy for Internet addicts.


Byline: ANI

Beijing, July 14 (ANI): The Chinese Health Ministry has ordered a halt to the controversial electroshock therapy electroshock therapy
n. Abbr. EST
See electroconvulsive therapy.
, which it was useing to treat teen Internet addicts.

The ministry has said that the therapy, which was administered by a clinic in Linyi, Shandong province, is not safe.

There is still a fierce debate over whether electroshock therapy was appropriate for young internet addicts or not.

"We have no clue whether this freaky freak·y  
adj. freak·i·er, freak·i·est
1. Strange or unusual; freakish.

2. Slang Frightening.



freak
 treatment has side-effects," said Kong Lingzhong, editor of a domestic Internet addiction-themed portal.

The Shandong clinic stopped giving shock treatment to teenagers as soon as they received the Health Ministry's notification, Yang yang (yang) [Chinese] in Chinese philosophy, the active, positive, masculine principle that is complementary to yin; see yin, under principle.  Shuyun of the clinic said.

She, however, emphasized that the program led by Dr. Yang Yongxin was not exclusively about electrotherapy electrotherapy /elec·tro·ther·a·py/ (-ther´ah-pe) treatment of disease by means of electricity.

e·lec·tro·ther·a·py
n.
Medical therapy using electric currents.
, and said it had important medical and psychological elements too.

More than 3,000 young people were being tricked or forced into in to the four-month long course. To enroll their children, parents or guardians had to sign a contract acknowledging that they would be given electric shocks of up to 200 milliamperes.

The treatment cost 6,000 yuan per month. Patients were considered "cured" or "reborn re·born  
adj.
Emotionally or spiritually revived or regenerated.


reborn
Adjective

active again after a period of inactivity

Adj. 1.
" once they admitted to their addiction.

It was reported that shocks were given if patients broke any of the center's 86 rules, which included prohibitions on eating chocolate, locking the bathroom door, taking pills before a meal, and sitting in Dr. Yang's chair without permission.

Details of the treatment first became public when former patients wrote about their experiences online.

Internet addiction is a growing problem in China, which now has nearly 300 million Internet users Internet user ninternauta m/f

Internet user Internet ninternaute m/f 
, including many adolescents who spend several hours each day playing computer games. (ANI)

Copyright 2009 Asian News International The Asian News International (ANI) agency provides multimedia news to China and 50 bureaus in India. It covers virtually all of South Asia since its foundation and presently claims, on its official website, to be the leading South Asia-wide news agency.  (ANI) - All Rights Reserved.

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Publication:Asian News International
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Jul 14, 2009
Words:299
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