Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 February 2009
There is practically no knowledge in the west regarding the status of psychiatry in the People's Republic since the time of the Cultural Revolution. The three publications on Chinese psychiatry that I was able to find, all of which are based largely upon the primary literature, terminate abruptly at the Cultural Revolution. At that time the Chinese Journal of Neurology and Psychiatrystopped publication and has not been reinstituted. The only medical journal which has begun publication, the China Medical Journal, carries occasional papers in neurology but thus far there have been none in psychiatry. A group of American psychiatrists who had been hoping to participate in an exchange visit to China under the auspices of the National Institute of Mental Health and the American Psychiatric Association had not succeeded in making the necessary contacts, and were in fact unable to give me the names of any Chinese psychiatrists in responsible positions.
1. Jan Cerny, “Chinese psychiatry,” International Journal of Psychiatry No. 1 (1965), pp. 229–47; Koran, Lorrin M., “Psychiatry in Mainland China: history and recent status,” American Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 128 (1972), pp. 84–92;CrossRefGoogle Scholar and a long chapter on medical psychology in the scholarly volume by R. and Chin, A., Psychological Research in Communist China 1949–1966 (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1969).Google Scholar