Emergency Treatment of Person with mental illness (Sec 94 of Mental Healthcare Act, 2017)

Emergency Treatment of Person with mental illness (Sec 94 of Mental Healthcare Act, 2017)

Any medical treatment, including treatment for mental illness, may be provided by any registered medical practitioner to a person with mental illness either at a health establishment or in the community, subject to the informed consent of the nominated representative, where the nominated representative is available, and where it is immediately necessary to prevent—

(a) death or irreversible harm to the health of the person; or

(b) the person inflicting serious harm to himself or to others; or

(c) the person causing serious damage to property belonging to himself or to
others where such behavior is believed to flow directly from the person’s mental illness.

(2) Nothing in this section shall allow any medical officer or psychiatrist to give to the person with mental illness medical treatment which is not directly related to the emergency treatment specified under sub-section (1).

(3) Nothing in this section shall allow any medical officer or psychiatrist to use electroconvulsive therapy as a form of treatment.

(4) The emergency treatment referred to in this section shall be limited to seventy-two hours or till the person with mental illness has been assessed at a mental health establishment, whichever is earlier:

Provided that during a disaster or emergency declared by the appropriate Government, the period of emergency treatment referred to in this sub-section may extend up to seven days.

7 Comments

  1. Sir,is unmodified ect totally illegal now?even in emergency?i mean does a psychiatrist go to jail if he gives ect in emergency?or unmodified ect?
    Asking both for childhood and adult patients

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