The Beijing Municipal People's Congress is discussing a draft
regulation that says that those who divulge the identity of mental
patients can be fined up to 30,000 yuan (US$3,750).
The draft of the Beijing Mental Health Regulation also said
those who force mental patients to take new drugs without approval
will be held criminally responsible and those who illegally
restrict the freedom of mental patients will be held civilly
responsible.
Public hospitals are not likely to force mental patients to
experiment with new drugs, said Luo Xiaonian, director of the
Psychiatry Department of Beijing Anding Hospital.
He also said protecting a mental patient's privacy follows basic
professional ethics for a psychologist.
The draft regulation said patients are allowed to voluntarily
experience new drugs. Drug developers must inform volunteers of the
details and risks of the clinical experiments and sign an agreement
with patients or their agents.
If the person is not competent to agree to a new clinical drug
test, his or her guardians must give their prior consent and an
agreement must be signed between the guardians and the drug
developers. Developers of new drugs should pay those who attend
clinical experiments.
According to the draft regulation, doctors are entitled to
recommend that patients with severe mental problems be
hospitalized. But if guardians or family relatives of the patients
refuse hospitalization, doctors may not force patients to stay in
hospital nor restrict their freedom.
Shen Teng, a lawyer from a Beijing-based law office cited by the
Legal Evening newspaper, said hospitals have a duty to prevent
patients from doing harm or being harmed when in hospital.
Statistics show there are 130,000 registered patients in Beijing
with severe mental problems. China now has 16 million mental
patients.
(China Daily September 16, 2006)