Shanghai has opened the first shelter in the country for
Internet addicts to help them bridge the gap between their virtual
world and dysfunctional family homes.
The inauguration of the halfway house last week highlights
growing government concerns about the explosive growth of the web
in China, where one in eight young net users are reportedly
addicted.
According to local media, the Shanghai Sunshine Community Youth
Affairs Centre offers one-night stays to youths who would otherwise
spend all their time in Internet cafes rather than going home.
It can provide free accommodation and counselling for up to four
minors at a time. Visitors can read books, play table tennis, play
the piano or use computers (not connected to the Internet).
The aim is not to stop young people going online but to provide
an alternative to gloomy cafes and an opportunity to discuss why
they spend so much time in them.
"None of the teenagers are forced to come here," said Wang Hui,
the chief social worker at the house. "We wander around in Internet
bars at night and bring them to the halfway house if the teen
agrees."
A survey by the China Youth Association for Network Development
found 13 per cent of young people with access to the web are online
for more than 38 hours a week a level agreed among health
professionals worldwide as indicating "Internet addiction
disorder."
A separate study by the Chinese Academy of Sciences blamed
Internet addiction for 80 per cent of the failure rate among
students.
China is expected to surpass 160 million Internet users this
year and authorities have responded with increasing urgency to what
they see as an epidemic of sleep disorders, depression and even
deaths caused by Internet overuse.
(China Daily August 31, 2006)