|





Apocalypse Suicide
Page
Good Mood
Living with Depression
Mental Health Recovery
NIMH
SHOCKED! ECT

HealthyPlace.com Radio
Depression Support Groups

Books on
Depression
Conference Transcripts
Depression Videos
Diaries - Journals
Disorders Definitions
Mental
Health News
Online Depression Tests
Psychiatric Medications
Resources
Site Map

Email
ICQ
Instant Messenger

Visit and Post

Abuse
ADD/ADHD
Addictions
Anxiety-Panic
Bipolar
Eating Disorders
Personality Disorders
Self-Injury
send this page to a friend
|
|
 |
Quarter Beijing
Students Suffer Depression
(September 6, 2006) - Nearly a quarter of Beijing's university students
suffer from
clinical depression, a Chinese newspaper reported on Wednesday,
reflecting financial pressures, fierce academic competition and a tight job
market for graduates.
|

Reuters Photo:
Students line up at a university registration office
in Weifang, east China, February 6, 2006.... |
|
At least 100,000 Beijing university students suffered from depression,
and 19 had
committed suicide in 2004, the Beijing News said, citing a health bureau
statement.
"Ignorance of the disease has resulted in a lack of understanding and
sympathy for most people with depression," the paper quoted the health
bureau as saying.
The costs of higher education in China, all but free 20 years ago, have
rocketed. The price of four years at university, at least 28,000 yuan (about
$3,500), was the equivalent of an average Chinese farmer's income for 35
years, Xinhua reported.
The many students that weather financial hardships face a tight labor
market and an undeveloped service sector unable to absorb them on
graduation.
China, wary of student discontent following the crackdown on the
Tiananmen Square movement in 1989, has been trying to improve the lot of its
long suffering students by placing limits on new tertiary admissions and
cutting prices of canteen food.
Source: Reuters
Last updated: 9/06
Related Stories
top ~
news index ~
send to
friend
HealthyPlace.com
Depression Center Links
home ~ site map ~
causes ~ types ~
people ~
living with
treatments ~ self-help ~ support ~ suicide ~ related
issues
|
 |
|
advertisement
|