• @rustyfish@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The researchers at the Center for Disease Control & Prevention also warned that the widespread belief among parents and teachers that getting good scores trumps anything else risks obscuring mental health issues plaguing children.

    Shitty parenting 101. I have been there and I broke down at minor setbacks. I lost my mind because of the smallest failures.

    If you do this to your child, in your delusion you are doing the right thing, fuck you.

    • @zephyreks@lemmy.mlM
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      1 year ago

      Haven’t studies shown a pretty strong correlation between scores and future income in China?

      FWIW, it’s not like that culture is new. The increase in suicide rates has other drivers. I think it’s far more likely to be driven by social media and social isolation than by academic pressure (which has existed to a similar degree for the past few decades).

      • @OurToothbrush@lemmy.mlM
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        21 year ago

        Let’s not forget the pandemic that they took seriously, saving millions of lives, caused a lot of trauma to a whole generation and kids are vulnerable to that sort of thing.

        • @zephyreks@lemmy.mlM
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          31 year ago

          Absolutely. Harsh lockdown policies reduce real social interactions and meaningfully affect mental health. In America, this is reflected in the absolutely dogshit quality of drivers today.

  • @zephyreks@lemmy.mlM
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    421 year ago

    The hit in the 11-14 demographic is rather concerning. It’s before the big wave of gaokao prep really hits (and thus precedes the job search stress), so it’s a really concerning demographic without a clear root cause.

      • @GoodbyeBlueMonday@startrek.website
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        1 year ago

        “True enough, there are such things as laughless jokes, what Freud called gallows humor. There are real-life situations so hopeless that no relief is imaginable.

        While we were being bombed in Dresden sitting in a cellar with our arms over our heads in case the ceiling fell, one soldier said as though he were a duchess in a mansion on a cold and rainy night, ‘I wonder what the poor people are doing tonight.’ Nobody laughed, but we were still all glad he said it. At least we were still alive! He proved it.”

        ― Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a Country

    • Sunstream
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      41 year ago

      I really should feel sorrier than I do for laughing out loud at this

  • Big P
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    321 year ago

    If it jumped 10% annually since 2010 wouldn’t that make it 130% or am I bad at maths

    • @RisingSwell@lemmy.world
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      491 year ago

      That’s not how this kind of thing works, and it depends on where it starts. If it’s 1% of children attempting suicide, which would be a huge amount, a 10% increase is 1.1%, and then for the next year a 10% increase makes it 1.21%, and then 1.33%. This is why when something increases your risk of something by say, 50%, it might mean absolutely nothing if the initial odds are 1 in a billion. 1.5 in a billion isn’t really any more likely.

      • GroteStreet 🦘
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        311 year ago

        My neighbour was freaking out when she saw in the local newspaper that burglaries in our town had increased by 100%

        I pointed out that we had 2 burglaries this year, compared to the 1 last year…

      • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The increase itself doesn’t matter where it starts, 10% each year over 13 years will always be an increase of ~245%.

        It also matters a lot to look at the relative change no matter the absolute amount, since it indicates a trend. Even if the chance for something terrible is 1 in a billion, a steady 10% increase every year should worry everyone, since there is a clear trend (and compounding increases get big faster than you’d expect).

    • R0cket_M00se
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      71 year ago

      10% above its current rate.

      So if 2% of children are killing themselves an increase of ten percent would be 2.2%.

  • @zephyreks@lemmy.mlM
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    111 year ago

    It went from 0.2/100k to 0.8/100k. In aggregate, that’s 800 people? I wonder how much of that is due to improved reporting given the lapse of the one-child policy, though.