Mental health legislation in Lebanon: Nonconformity to international standards and clinical dilemmas in psychiatric practice

International Journal of Law and Psychiatry
Hala KerbageSami Richa

Abstract

Mental health legislation represents an important mean of protecting the rights of persons with mental disabilities by preventing human rights violations and discrimination and by legally reinforcing the objectives of a mental health policy. The last decade has seen significant changes in the laws relating to psychiatric practice all over the world, especially with the implementation of the Convention for the Rights of People with Disabilities (CRPD). In this paper, we review the existing legislation in Lebanon concerning the following areas in mental health: treatment and legal protection of persons with mental disabilities, criminal laws in relation to offenders with mental disorders, and laws regulating incapacity. We will discuss these texts in comparison with international recommendations and standards on the rights of persons with disabilities, showing the recurrent contradiction between them. Throughout our article, we will address the clinical dilemmas that Lebanese psychiatrists encounter in practice, in the absence of a clear legislation that can orient their decisions and protect their patients from abuse.

References

Jun 26, 2010·International Journal of Mental Health Systems·Rachel JenkinsEman Sorour

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Citations

May 20, 2017·Current Opinion in Psychiatry·Ina JahnKatarina Stengler
Jul 21, 2017·Perspectives in Psychiatric Care·Ahmad Rayan, Mirna Fawaz
Jun 7, 2015·Health Research Policy and Systems·Farah Yehia, Fadi El Jardali
Jan 11, 2020·Asia-Pacific Psychiatry : Official Journal of the Pacific Rim College of Psychiatrists·Kundadak Ganesh KudvaNorman Sartorius
Nov 5, 2020·Asia-Pacific Psychiatry : Official Journal of the Pacific Rim College of Psychiatrists·Glen Cedric RocheKundadak Ganesh Kudva
Sep 10, 2021·Journal of Forensic Sciences·Hassan S AlbarbariRitesh G Menezes

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