Mental health: Promoting and protecting human rights

Everyone, whoever and wherever they are, has a deserving and inherent right to the highest attainable standard of mental health.

Having a mental health condition should never be a reason to deprive a person of their human rights or to exclude them from decisions about their own health.

Unfortunately, people with mental health conditions around the world experience a wide range of human rights violations. Many experience coercive practices including involuntary admission and treatment as well as seclusion and restraint. It is also common for people to be excluded from community life, discriminated against, denied basic rights such as food and shelter, and prohibited from voting or getting married.

Many more cannot access the mental health care they need or can only access care that violates their human rights. In many places, lack of community based services means that the main setting for mental health care is long-stay psychiatric hospitals or institutions, which are often associated with human rights violations.

The QualityRights e-training is a free online course, developed by WHO, which is designed to help you:

It is available in 11 languages. Find out more here.

The QualityRights initiative aims to support countries to assess and improve the quality of care in mental health and related services and to promote the rights of people with psychosocial, intellectual and cognitive disabilities.