Mental Health Patient Rights in the UAE (2026 Legal Guide) — Rules & Requirements
About this article
Sourced from Omani royal decrees, ministerial decisions, and the Basic Statute of the State. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
The UAE passed its first dedicated mental health law in 2019, establishing important patient protections:
- Right to treatment: People with mental health conditions have the right to receive appropriate treatment in a therapeutic environment that respects their dignity.
- Voluntary treatment: Most mental health treatment is voluntary — you choose to seek treatment and can discharge yourself at any time.
- Involuntary admission: A person can only be involuntarily admitted if they pose an immediate risk to themselves or others, and only with the approval of two psychiatrists and a review by the relevant health authority.
- Review board: Involuntary admissions must be reviewed by a mental health review board within a set period to confirm the admission is justified.
- Non-discrimination: People with mental health conditions cannot be discriminated against in employment, housing, or public services.
When does it apply?
- You are seeking mental health treatment in the UAE.
- You or someone you know is being involuntarily admitted to a psychiatric facility.
- You face discrimination because of a mental health condition.
What to Do If You Need Mental Health Treatment in the UAE
- Seek help early — contact a licensed psychologist or psychiatrist. Many hospitals have dedicated mental health departments.
- If you are in crisis, call the mental health helpline — 800-4673 (HOPE) in Abu Dhabi, the DHA mental health line (800-342) in Dubai, or the Rashid Hospital Psychiatric Emergency (04-219-2000) for 24/7 psychiatric emergencies.
- If a family member is involuntarily admitted, request a review by the mental health review board.
- Check your insurance — mental health services must be covered under the Essential Benefits Plan in most emirates.
What should you NOT do?
- Do not ignore symptoms — mental health is covered by UAE insurance and seeking help carries no legal consequences.
- Do not attempt to admit someone involuntarily without going through the proper medical and legal process.
- Do not assume mental health records are shared with employers — medical confidentiality protections apply fully to mental health treatment.
About Healthcare Rights in Oman
Health insurance in the UAE is mandatory and tied to your visa under the Health Insurance Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 2 of 2019). Employers must provide cover, and every plan includes the Essential Benefits Plan — outpatient, emergency, maternity, and prescriptions. Public hospitals treat real emergencies regardless of insurance. Patient rights — informed consent, record access, malpractice complaints through the Higher Medical Liability Committee — come from Federal Law No. 4 of 2016. Mental health protections sit in Federal Law No. 10 of 2023. Your regulator is DHA (Dubai), DOH (Abu Dhabi), or MOHAP elsewhere.
Common Questions
What is the mental health rights right in Oman?
The UAE passed its first dedicated mental health law in 2019, establishing important patient protections:Right to treatment: People with mental health conditions have the right to receive appropriate treatment in a therapeutic environment that respects their dignity.Voluntary treatment: Most mental health treatment is voluntary — you choose to seek treatment and can discharge yourself at any time.Involuntary admission: A person can only be involuntarily admitted if they pose an immediate risk to themselves or others, and only with the approval of two psychiatrists and a review by the relevant...
When does it apply — mental health rights?
You are seeking mental health treatment in the UAE.You or someone you know is being involuntarily admitted to a psychiatric facility.You face discrimination because of a mental health condition.
What should I do if I need mental health support or psychiatric care in the UAE?
Seek help early — contact a licensed psychologist or psychiatrist. Many hospitals have dedicated mental health departments.If you are in crisis, call the mental health helpline — 800-4673 (HOPE) in Abu Dhabi, the DHA mental health line (800-342) in Dubai, or the Rashid Hospital Psychiatric Emergency (04-219-2000) for 24/7 psychiatric emergencies.If a family member is involuntarily admitted, request a review by the mental health review board.Check your insurance — mental health services must be covered under the Essential Benefits Plan in most emirates.
What should you NOT do — mental health rights?
Do not ignore symptoms — mental health is covered by UAE insurance and seeking help carries no legal consequences.Do not attempt to admit someone involuntarily without going through the proper medical and legal process.Do not assume mental health records are shared with employers — medical confidentiality protections apply fully to mental health treatment.