one hundred and fifty six. This is a diverse human, between the ages of 10 and 20, who committed suicide from high stamina problems for 12 months. According to police information provided by Rep. Oh Young-hwan of the main opposition Democratic Party, about 5,258 of a total of 13,205 assisted suicides in 2021 had a history of eyebrow treatment. The same figure suggests that the staggering number of suicides between the ages of 10-29 will increase every 12 months after 2019 to 888 by 2021. This figure indicates that a wide range of young people who are developing in Korea suffer from mental illness. increasing lethal effect. According to South Korean statistics, suicide is the number one cause of death under the age of 30 in 2021. The general public's awareness of the risks of intellectual disability is growing as the media talks about panic disorder and depression, especially celebrities who suffer from it. However, the stigma of this route of pollution remains to some extent in Korean society, and humans are missing the crucial golden time for treatment.
More people suffer from mental problems.
Actor Lee Byung-hun talked about his recent assault on a plane bound for the United States. A few years ago, OK-pop celebrity Kang Daniel took a break from all his paintings after he became famous for panic disorder and depression. He later said that he felt he was "removing all remaining will." The superiority of panic attacks or despair has increased steadily in recent years. The number of people receiving treatment for depression increased by 35.1% from 691,164 in 2017 to 933,481 in 2021, which is the same level as the medical insurance evaluation and evaluation institution. Over the same period, the throughput for panic attacks increased from 653,694 to 865,108. The fact has confirmed rapid growth among the younger Koreans. Despair increased by 127.1% in their 20s, 90.2% in their teens, and 67.3% in their 30s During the same period, panic patients increased by 86.7% in their 20s and 78s. One of the problems with intellectual pollution is that it often occurs in groups, making the situation more intense for patients. Cho Hong-joon, assistant professor of psychiatry at Konkuk University's Clinical Middle School, found in a 2020 study that patients with panic disorder were significantly more likely to suffer from agoraphobia, and each disease was likely to boom the patient's suffering. I did.
"The results of this study suggest that pda patients (panic patients with agoraphobia) experienced excessive panic symptoms, more severe psychotic comorbidities, and worse disease progression than pd patients (panic patients without agoraphobia)," said Dr. do," he wrote.
People with pda have a younger age of onset and are more likely to take benzodiazepines for a long time and take antipsychotics.
Social stigma and resistance to treatment
Despite the surge in mental health treatment, many are hesitant to seek help for fear that treating an intellectual infection will stain their perceptions. Seoul National University Nursing Home Psychology Department Professor Ji-eun Park evaluated 6 million messages shared on social media from 2016 to 2019 and published a study on why humans are not getting help for intellectual diseases. She said 25.9%. 14.4% of teens avoided seeing a psychiatrist because of concerns that it could affect their college admissions, despite concerns that they might appear "loop personality". About 22.4% of 20-12 month olds were concerned that a capable employer could see their medical information. Among those in their 30s and 40s, 22.1% said they were worried that health statistics would have a negative impact on insurance policies, and 14.8% were worried about being known as a 'loop'.
They have reasons for his or her difficulties. Last August, South Korea's National Human Rights Commission approved a neighborhood insurance agency to allow desperate people to purchase insurance programs. One company said characters could enter the judging process a year after the relief was lifted, while another flatly declined. Seoul said, "My friend asked me to get treatment without signing up for health insurance." He said, "I didn't try it, but I didn't even tell my boss." - An office worker in his 30s who is currently receiving treatment for depression and panic disorder. Professor Park cited the lack of publicly accessible treatment records as a reason most people hesitate to seek psychological help. "Professionals (in the field of intellectual health) should try to reach out to the public and bring the facts from a public perspective," she said. She said, "There is no reason for any mystery to exist about psychotherapy." The Korean Neuropsychiatric Association's 'Perceived Perceptions, Thinking Styles and Impacts of Depression Perceived in Korean Workplaces' shows that there may be a terrible perception among Korean workers about the treatment of mental disorders. A top 31% of those perceived as depressed took leave, and 34% no longer informed their employers or co-workers of their contamination. Researchers asked respondents (1,000 16-64 year-olds) what they would do if they found a colleague in despair, and most respondents said that such conversations could be avoided (30.2%). , indicating that talking about mental pollution is a sensitive issue for each party. The researchers also pointed to an observation that predicted that depression's impact on conversational productivity would be ten times worse through presenting than absenteeism. In other words, depressed employees are now out of treatment and looking poorly is a bigger headache than no picture for mental health. "A good way to prevent the productivity drop caused by presentationism in Korean offices is to have the right machines to ask for help and help people who are suffering, with enough applications to detect depression at an early level," the researchers said. do," he concluded.