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 Appeared in CNN.
BEIJING, China (AP) -- One day next week, three nurses will sit down at
telephones in Beijing and do something that would have been unheard of in
China just a decade ago: They'll try to stop anyone who calls from
committing suicide.
As 1.3 billion people cope with the most sweeping changes their nation has
ever experienced, China's first suicide research and prevention center is
opening in the capital with a lengthy list of priorities -- everything
from intervening in emergencies to changing outdated attitudes about
mental health.
It's a tall order for a populace accustomed to centuries of gritting their
teeth through hard times and coping with "chiku"-- a traditional metaphor
for enduring hardship that means, literally, "eating bitter."
"The changing culture and society have given us an opening," said Dr.
Michael R. Phillips, executive director of the new Beijing Suicide
Research and Prevention Center and a physician in China for 18 years.
"There's such rapid social change that people are willing to think about
things they haven't thought about before," he said Tuesday.
The center, which opens next week, employs 11 doctors and 13 nurses, most
of them Chinese. It will offer a range of services, from the toll-free hot
line, to counseling and crisis intervention, to comprehensive research --
already under way -- on suicide and attitudes toward it.
But doctors see an entirely non-clinical development as the most
significant sign of changing attitudes: The center is at a public
facility, Huilongguan Hospital, and is being funded quite willingly by
Beijing's city government.
"Suicide and depression, they're definitely something that goes hand in
hand with our fast development," said Zhang Jianshu, an official at the
Beijing Bureau of Health, which contributed $242,000.
"As China develops, we have to pay more attention to this kind of health
issue."
Long before Deng Xiaoping's reforms began two decades ago, suicide was a
problem for China -- particularly among rural women plagued for
generations by abuse, unrewarding lives and feelings of deep hopelessness.
These days, convulsive change is stirring things up even more. Financial
upheaval -- a common contributor to suicide -- is rolling across the land
as the opening of once-stable markets to foreign investment reconfigures
the economy and puts millions out of work.
Alarming
Though there is no standard reporting system for deaths in China,
researchers using available figures extrapolate that 287,000 Chinese kill
themselves each year, making suicide the No. 5 cause of death in the
world's most populous country. Some two million Chinese try to kill
themselves annually.
Even more alarming to researchers: Suicide is the No. 1 cause of death for
Chinese ages 15 to 34, and women have a 25 percent higher rate than men.
In addition, rural suicide rates are three times as high as urban rates.
"Clearly, this is one of modern China's most important issues," said Dr.
Liang Hong, the center's clinical services director and head of the China
end of the International Depression Project, a research consortium with
fellow developing nations India and Colombia.
"Older people don't know much about mental health. People in the
countryside, they have no idea they can get help," she said. "People in
China don't think this is something to see a doctor about."
Though the center is new, its physicians have been doing research on
suicide for years. Their latest paper, on why and how Chinese kill
themselves, was compiled from scores of interviews with suicide victims'
families and will be published Friday in the British medical journal
Lancet.
Beyond helping people directly, the center hopes to serve as a model --
first for Beijing's 500 hospitals, and eventually for the rest of the
country. It is surveying 50 top hospitals in the capital to determine how
they can start anti-suicide programs and train doctors.
The most high-profile part of the center will undoubtedly be its hot line,
advertised in newspapers, on television and over loudspeakers at major
sporting events. Three celebrity spokespeople -- including Dashan, a
Canadian comedian renowned in China -- will be endorsing it as well.

November 27, 2002.
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