Mental health in South Korea

South Korea

Mental health issues are prevalent in South Korea, with the highest suicide rate and the highest rate of hospitalizations for mental illness among OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries.[1] South Korea has state-funded mental health services, the majority of which are inpatient hospital facilities, but they are largely underfunded and underutilized.[2][3] Despite the prevalence of mental illness, social stigma remains prevalent throughout the South Korean population, which discourages sufferers from seeking treatment.[4] Mental illness, while present across all demographic groups, is most common among the elderly and adolescents in South Korea.[5][6]

History

Western medicine was first introduced to South Korea by missionary doctors, and led to the transition of mental healthcare from shamanistic healers and traditional Korean medicine to mental hospitals sponsored by the Japanese government, which was occupying Korea, by 1910. Missionary hospitals, which tended to be more humane, also existed, but the isolation of patients by government mental hospitals contributed to the development of stigma in Korean society.[7] Recently, the basis of mental healthcare in South Korea has shifted from long-term hospital stays to community-based healthcare,[2][8] but the length of admission of those staying in mental hospitals is on an upward trend.[1][9] This calls into question the effectiveness of South Korean health infrastructure, as the average length of stay in other OECD countries was less than a quarter of that in South Korea in 2011.[1] Some experts question how well treatment methods in South Korean mental hospitals are working compared to that of other OECD countries.[1]

Societal perceptions of mental illness

South Koreans have been found to have comparatively higher levels of internalized stigma, which relates to higher rates of mental illness and more severe symptoms.[4][10] Seeking treatment for mental health conditions is largely frowned upon in Korean culture, with reports stating that only seven percent of those affected by mental illness seek psychiatric help.[11] As a culture heavily influenced by Confucianism, the honor of the family is prioritized over the individual, leading Koreans to forgo treatment to preserve their family's face.[12] Those who turn to therapy often pay out-of-pocket and in cash to avoid the stigma associated with mental health services on one's insurance record.[12] Stigma also hinders the ability of those recovering from mental illness to reintegrate into society.[11]

Mental healthcare

South Korean law prohibits workplace discrimination based on mental health conditions, but discrimination persists due to the lack of enforcement of such legislation.[3] Psychiatrists and other mental health professionals are well-trained and numerous, but mental healthcare remains isolated from primary care, still a major contributor to South Korea's strong stigma against mental healthcare.[3] Mental health medication is widely available, and almost all medications available to patients in the West are available in South Korea. The universal health coverage as provided by the state means that the majority of South Koreans can afford medicine and treatment for mental illness,[13] but stigma often discourages people from utilizing their health coverage.[12]

Public spending on mental healthcare remains low, at 3%, most of which goes to inpatient mental hospitals despite the fact that most people receive treatment from outpatient facilities.[3] As of 2005, the Korean government did not officially allot any funds towards mental healthcare in the national budget.[13]

The South Korean government passed the Mental Health Act in 1995.[8] The Mental Health Act expanded the number of national mental hospitals and community mental health centers with the goal of making mental healthcare more accessible to communities.[13] However, the act also made involuntary hospitalizations significantly easier.[8] In 2017, the Mental Health Act was amended to protect the individual rights and liberties of those admitted to inpatient mental hospitals.[14] The 1999 Medical Protection Act and Welfare Law for the Handicapped protect the rights of disabled persons, and the mentally ill have qualified for protection under these laws since 2000.[13]

Mental illness

Contributing factors

Economic hardship during the late 1990s led to a sharp increase in mental illness and suicide in South Korea, as well as almost all other Asian countries that the economic depression affected.[15] [16] Social stigma within the South Korean population likewise discourages people from initially seeking treatment, exacerbating the severity of mental illness.[4][10] Cultural factors other than stigma, such as binge-drinking, may also contribute to mental health issues within South Korean society.Due to Korea’s societal, academic and corporate structure Koreans are placed under substantial stress from a relatively young age. South Koreans are known for their intelligence and incredible work ethic, these qualities contribute significantly to the economy but they also place the people who drive the economy under immense pressure. Korean children and adolescents are placed in an education system that has a relentless focus on intellectual excellence with anything less than such is unacceptable. Suicide is the leading cause of death for adolescent Koreans making suicide suffocating reality in school systems. Korean students don’t only face academic pressure, they also face common stressors that the average student faces in any school setting. Social exclusion is a contributing factor to depression amongst Koreans aged from 10-19, in school systems children are victimized for their economic status or for other trivial reasons. Korean students are encouraged to excel above their peers which encourages a competitive environment welcoming hostility amongst peers. Korean students who have been bullied are said to have lower tests scores, lower self-esteem and increased levels of anxiety making them more likely to become victims of depression.

Depression

In 2001, between 3 and 4.2 percent of the South Korean population was estimated to have major depressive disorder as outlined in the DSM-IV, a number which has been increasing.[5] Women, smokers, shift workers, those with poor health, those who exercise in the evenings, those who perceive their lives to be stressful, and those that were underweight were more likely to have major depressive disorder.[5] Depression is estimated to cost over $4 billion USD in the South Korean economy, with morbidity costs taking up the greatest proportion of that value.[17] Increasing attention to the treatment and prevention of depression would affect economic growth as well as public health.[17]

Alcohol use disorder

Compared to the United States and other East Asian countries, alcohol use disorder is more prevalent in Korea, and treatment is four times less likely to be sought out in Korea.[18] The 2009 Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey found that less than 2% of those with alcohol use disorder had received any form of treatment or intervention by a professional.[19] Kye-Song Lee found in a 2013 study that nearly 7% of South Koreans have alcohol use disorder, the highest rate of any country in the world.[19] South Koreans drink more alcohol by volume per capita than the residents of any other country in the world, consuming twice as much alcohol and 1.5 times as much hard alcohol per person as Russians, the next highest consumers.[20] The prevalence of alcohol use disorder is increased by the expectation of businesspeople to engage in heavy drinking with their colleagues after work.[12] In addition to being seen as a method of bonding with friends and colleagues, drinking alcohol is also viewed as a method of stress-relief.[20] However, alcoholism is associated with violent crime in South Korea, with about 2 out of every 5 violent crime cases perpetrated by someone under the influence of alcohol.[19]

Other mental illness

Maeng-Je Cho et al. found that over one-third of the South Korean population has had a mental disorder at any point in their lives, and over one-fifth have experienced a disorder in the past year.[21] 17% of the South Korean population has insomnia, which is a rate comparable to that of insomnia in the United States.[22] 6.6% of Koreans have nicotine dependence disorder, 2% have a mood disorder, and 5.2% have an anxiety disorder, all of which are less frequent among Koreans than among Americans.[18]

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is especially prevalent among refugees from North Korea living in South Korea.[23] In a 2005 study, Jeon et al. found that 29.5% of North Korean refugees in South Korea were found to suffer from PTSD.[23] A higher rate was found among female refugees than male refugees.[23]

Demographics of mental illness

Mental illness in the elderly

Between 17.8 and 27.9 percent of those aged 65 or older in South Korea are likely to suffer from depression, significantly higher than the rate in other countries.[24] Factors associated with late life depression in Korea include illiteracy, living alone, poverty, low education, smoking, head trauma, and intellectual disability.[24] The high rate of depression among Korean elders may be a result of the rapidly aging population and the dissolution of the tradition of children caring for their aging parents.[24] Government social services for the elderly, such as the Law of Elderly Welfare, are inadequate to provide for the growing population's needs, contributing to mental illness within the demographic.[6]

Among a sample of elderly Koreans living in the United States, 34% were found to have depression, less than a fifth of which had ever seen a mental health professional. The majority of older Koreans living in the United States exhibited a negative perception of mental health services.[25]

Mental illness in adolescents

More than 10% of Seoul adolescents have been found at high risk for internet addiction disorder.[26] Internet addiction is positively correlated with family factors including child abuse and a harsh parenting style.[26] Depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder are both correlated with internet addiction among adolescents.[27]

Hyun-Sook Park et al. have found a gender difference in predictors of suicide ideation among Korean youth; with the main predictors for females being bullying, sexual orientation, depression, low self-esteem, and hostility; and the primary predictors for males being history of suicide attempt, parental alcohol abuse, smoking, hostility, and low self-esteem.[28]

Besides the elderly, adolescents have the highest suicide rate in South Korea[5] and adolescents had the highest proportional increase in suicide rate between 1986 and 2005.[6]

Suicide

In 2013, the suicide rate in South Korea was 29.1 per 100,000, a decrease from 33.3 per 100,000 in 2011. This rate is more than twice the OECD average.[1] Between 2000 and 2011, South Korea's suicide rate more than doubled, contrary to the international trend of a steadily decreasing suicide rate.[1] This rise is suicides is potentially linked to the economic wellbeing of South Koreans, as suicides have historically been higher during times of economic strife.[6] The increase in suicides has been most significant among women, adolescents, and the elderly.[5][6]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Korea's increase in suicides and psychiatric bed numbers is worrying, says OECD" (PDF). OECD. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  2. 1 2 Roh, Sungwon (2016). "Mental health services and R&D in South Korea". International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 10 (45). doi:10.1186/s13033-016-0077-3.
  3. 1 2 3 4 World Health Organization (2011). "WHO-AIMS Report on Mental Health in Republic of Korea" (PDF). WHO Collaborating Center for Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Community Mental Health in Korea. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  4. 1 2 3 Kim, Woo Jung; Song, Yoon Joo; Ryu, Hyun Sook (2015). "Internalized Stigma and Its Psychosocial Correlates in Korean Patients with Serious Mental Illness". Psychiatry Research. 225 (3): 433–39.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Ohayon, Maurice M.; Hong, Seung-Chul (2006). "Prevalence of Major Depressive Disorder in the General Population of South Korea". Journal of Psychiatric Research. 40 (1): 30–36. doi:10.1016/j.jpsychires.2005.02.003.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Kwon, Jin-Won; Chun, Heeran; Cho, Sung-il (27 February 2009). "A closer look at the increase in suicide rates in South Korea from 1986-2005". BMC Public Health. 9 (72). doi:10.1186/1471-2458-9-72.
  7. Min, Sung-kil; Yeo, In-sok (2017). "Mental Health in Korea: Past and Present". Mental Health in Asia and the Pacific: 79–92. doi:10.1007/978-1-4899-7999-5_5.
  8. 1 2 3 Kahng, Sang Kyoung; Kim, Hyemee (2010). "A Developmental Overview of the Mental Health System in South Korea". Social Work in Public Health. 25 (2): 158–175. doi:10.1080/19371910903070408.
  9. Kim, Agnus M (2017). "Why do psychiatric patients in Korea stay longer in hospital?". International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 11 (2). doi:10.1186/s13033-016-0110-6.
  10. 1 2 Boyd, Jennifer E; Adler, Emerald P (January 2014). "Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness (ISMI) Scale: A Multinational Review". Comprehensive Psychiatry. 55 (1). doi:10.1016/j.comppsych.2013.06.005.
  11. 1 2 Research and Information Services. "RRT Research Response" (PDF). Refugee Research Tribunal. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  12. 1 2 3 4 McDonald, Mark (6 July 2011). "Stressed and Depressed, Koreans Avoid Therapy". The New York Times.
  13. 1 2 3 4 World Health Organization (2005). Mental Health Atlas 2005. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization Press. pp. 384–385. ISBN 92 4 156296 X.
  14. Shin, Dongho (6 March 2017). "The World Health Organization (WHO) expressed support for the revision of the Korean Mental Health Act". Department of Mental Health Policy. Retrieved 20 October 2017.
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  16. Chang, Shu-Sen; Gunnell, David; Sterne, Jonathan A.C.; Lu, Tsung-Hsueh; Cheng, Andrew T.A. "Was the economic crisis 1997–1998 responsible for rising suicide rates in East/Southeast Asia? A time–trend analysis for Japan, Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Thailand". Social Science & Medicine. 68 (7): 1322–1331. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.01.010.
  17. 1 2 Chang, S.M.; Hong, J.P.; Cho, M.J. (May 2012). "Economic burden of depression in South Korea". Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 47 (683). doi:10.1007/s00127-011-0382-8.
  18. 1 2 Chou, S. Patricia; Lee, H.K.; Cho, M.J. (April 2012). "Alcohol Use Disorders, Nicotine Dependence, and Co Occurring Mood and Anxiety Disorders in the United States and South Korea—A Cross-National Comparison". Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research. 36: 654–662. doi:10.1111/j.1530-0277.2011.01639.x.
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