If a man works 12 hours a day, seven days a week, is despised
and poorly paid, has no stable relationship, entertainment or
social life - what will happen to him?
A mental breakdown?
This is a reality for many of China's 100 million rural migrant
workers who come to cities in search of employment.
Experts attending the recently concluded 28th International
Congress of Psychology in Beijing appealed for more attention to
this psychologically vulnerable group as China's urbanization
gathers pace.
Each year, 15 million peasants leave their lands and flock to
the cities for jobs.
But they often live on the fringes of urban society.
"They live in isolation - far from families, no communities,
discriminated by urban neighbors and no relationship. This can
cause an emotional breakdown," warned Wang Chunguang, a researcher
of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
According to Chen Bing, a psychiatrist from Beijing's Anding
Hospital, rural migrant workers are vulnerable to cultural shock,
unfair treatment and hard travel to distant cities.
Some migrant workers also suffer from sex-based psychosis.
A survey of 1,900 migrant workers in Shenzhen, southern
Guangdong Province, showed that more than 50 percent have sexual
inhibition and more than 20 percent have visited prostitutes.
Though there are no accurate figures of rural migrants who
suffer psychotic problems, Zhang Zhiqiang, a 36-year-old migrant
from Sichuan Province working on a construction site, described
life for this group in a few words: "loneliness, anxiety and
depression - these are problems of urban people but everyday
reality for us."
Wang blamed the isolation to the absence of community and public
life.
However, Wang said the government's training program for migrant
workers has partly eased the situation.
(Xinhua News Agency August 19, 2004)