Showing posts with label Mental Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mental Health. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Warning over child #Addiction


Mental health department urges govt to rethink decision to recognize online gaming

THE MOVE to officially recognise eSports could lead to children becoming addicted to online games, health experts warn.

Mental Health Department adviser Dr Yongyud Wongpiromsarn said the promotion of eSports would likely do more harm than good. 

“We have already established a panel to raise this issue at the National Health Assembly forum later this year,” he said. 
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 Yongyud hoped that relevant authorities, including political office holders, would review the Sports Authority of Thailand’s decision in 2017 to recognise eSports as a form of sport. 
“We are worried that in the end more Thai children will become addicted to games,” Yongyud said. (But the are already addicted)

He said most countries in the world had not treated online games as sports and pointed out that although eSports made a presence at the 2018 Asian Games, it was there just as a demonstration game. 

A study in the United States revealed recently that just one in 1 million online-gamers could become a professional in the field, he said. “Dozens of thousands, meanwhile, have become game addicts,” he said. 

In Thailand, the Institute of Child and Adolescent Mental Health reported that as many as 60 children had sought treatments for game addiction in recent months. (years)

“The number of game addicts has risen by one-fold since eSports has become recognised as a form of sport,” Yongyud said. 

He said his concern was shared by people working for the protection of children. 


 Some entrepreneurs promoted eSports by claiming that players’ skills could build a future career, and some even offered to host eSports competitions for schools. 

“In France, students can’t even play with cellphones in school compounds,” Yongyud said. In Thailand, at least eight universities offer courses related to eSports. 

Teerarat Pantawee, who heads the National Health Assembly’s panel on children and media, told a recent forum that eSports had grown in popularity partly because there were many official eSports contests and promotions.


Excessive exposure

“Thailand’s eSports industry is now worth more than Bt10 billion. It has also been growing at the rate of 12 per cent per annum,” she said.

According to the 2018 DQ Impact Report, which examines the “precarious status of children’s exposure to cyber-risks worldwide”, Thai children spend 35 hours a week online. Of all children using the Internet in Thailand, more than 50 per cent go online to play games.

Teerarat said many children were now negotiating for more online game-playing time by arguing with their parents that their games are a sport.

But “game addiction causes physical, mental and brain problems”, she warned.

“Children’s excessive exposure to such media is not good for developing their intellectual and emotional quotients,” Teerarat emphasised. 

Sourse - TheNation 

Ps.
But this is nothing new.
So long the elite providers support their internet-cafes  (almost to find in every street / city)   nothing go changed.
The most can not even write their own name in a common language. (education)

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Majority of Mental Health Issues Remain Untreated in #Laos


Like all countries, the number of Lao citizens who suffer from mental health issues are abundant. However, due to the lack of treatment options readily available to patients, 41,000 people in Laos live with their mental health issues untreated.

Socio-economic development is vital to the improvement of people’s daily lives, but also heightens the risk of mental health issues due to the increased pressures of modern existence. A psychiatrist has explained that mental health issues can be triggered or provoked by things such as socio-economic difficulties and other mental burdens, along with inadequate access to diagnosis and treatment.

At a workshop themed ‘Mental Health in Laos’ earlier this week, programme manager of the Basic Needs project and a practicing psychiatrist, Dr ChantharavadyChoulamany, stated that the biggest obstacles in providing a solution to the mental health struggles in Laos, is due to the lack of resources for effective treatments.

Dr Chantharavady went on to explain that mental disorders affect nearly 12 percent of the world’s population, an estimated 450 million people, and that one out of every four people globally will experience a mental illness at some point in their lives.

Statistics have shown that 70,000 people in Laos have reported mental health issues, but  due to inadequate personnel, facilities and financial resources, only 29,000 of those people have access to treatment and mental health services. 

Dr Chantharavady added, “According to a survey by Basic Needs, anxiety disorders rank first with a rate of 33 percent followed by schizophrenia with 19 percent, epilepsy at 14 percent, psychosis due to infectious diseases 8 percent, depression 3 percent, substance/alcohol abuse 0.7 percent, dementia 0.5 percent, and mental retardation 0.1 percent.”

People suffering from mental illnesses not only have to battle the disorder itself, but with the stigma from society as well. They are not only discriminated against, marginalized and shunned in their own community, but in some cases, are subjected to emotional and physical abuse in both mental health facilities and by the public. Inadequate quality care due to lack of qualified health professionals and dilapidated facilities could possibly lead to further deterioration of their mental state of mind.

Currently, there are just two hospitals that provide mental health units, Mahosot Hospital and 103 Military Hospital, amassing over  27,000 cases.

During this year’s World Mental Health Day on October 10, the World Health Organization will be raising awareness in communities with the aim of ensuring that people with mental health conditions can continue to live with dignity, with the theme “Dignity in Mental Health”

According to WHO, it does so through the promotion of human rights-oriented policy and law as well as training of health professionals, respect for informed consent to treatment, inclusion in decision-making processes, and public information campaigns.

Source - Laotian Times