| magnetaress |
11-06-2022 12:44 PM |
Also bottom one where they go to the ferris wheel i think is basically what amounts to poverty in japan. (sorry if this seems insulting it's actually a compliment from an American perspective).
Does japan have really strong anti-drug laws?
Quote:
Japan's drug laws are very strict, although not as strict as fellow Asian nations such as Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia and China, where drug offenders can be executed. Japan is not one of the 35 countries that has the death penalty for drug offences – instead the maximum punishment being life imprisonment.Apr 20, 2022
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yes actchually :D
also I do believe a high rate of institutionalization for mental health??? pretty sure Althought the WHO is probably trying to destroy their way of life.
Quote:
However, as has long been indicated here and elsewhere, Japan lags behind other countries in terms of deinstitutionalization. Furthermore, the population of inpatients in psychiatric care beds is aging dramatically. In addition to the diversification of mental illness, the question of what measures to implement going forward regarding current psychiatric bed resources has emerged as a new challenge.
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I don't know about u guys but it seems like a real good trade off.
Quote:
The mean length of stay in psychiatric care beds in Japan (mean length of hospital stay among discharged patients) was approximately 500 days in 1990 but fell to under 300 days in 2011 and further decreased to approximately 266 days in 2018 [9]. This number is also conspicuously higher than in other OECD countries. However, as with the number of hospital beds, definitions differ by country.
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That's actually pretty short and not so severe, maybe the path to suicide - permanent incarceration in prison is shorter from these facilities. Through their system.
All food for thought.
Quote:
Long-term institutionalization has been the primary treatment for mentally ill patients in Japan since the early 1920s. The average length of stay in a Japanese mental hospital in 1989 was 496 days, 41 times the average stay of patients in the United States. Although the government has encouraged and supported the integration of mentally ill people in the community and the development of rehabilitation programs since enactment of the Mental Health Law of 1988, implementation of such programs has been slow. The authors summarize the history of mental health care in Japan, discuss the current availability of mental health care facilities and personnel, and recommend changes needed to improve care.
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They should def be careful of 'progressive humanitarian reform' to their civil society hehehehehe
Or they'll be looking like DC and baltimore real soon (TM)
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