## Correct Answer: C. 30 days Under the Mental Healthcare Act (MHA) 2017, **voluntary admission** is the most common and preferred mode of psychiatric hospitalization in India. Section 19 of the MHA 2017 explicitly defines the maximum period for which a person can remain voluntarily admitted without formal review or conversion to involuntary status. The Act permits a maximum of **30 days** of continuous voluntary self-admission. After 30 days, the person must either be discharged or the admission must be formally converted to involuntary admission (if criteria are met) with proper legal procedures including examination by a psychiatrist and notification to the State Mental Health Authority. This 30-day window ensures that voluntary patients retain autonomy while preventing indefinite detention under the guise of voluntary status. The rationale is to balance patient rights with clinical necessity—allowing sufficient time for initial assessment and stabilization while mandating formal review and legal safeguards for longer-term care. This provision reflects India's commitment to the UN Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities and protects vulnerable populations from coercive practices masked as "voluntary" admission. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. 48 hours** — This is wrong because 48 hours is far too short for meaningful voluntary psychiatric care. While 48 hours is relevant in the MHA 2017 as the maximum period for observation without formal admission (Section 18), it does not apply to voluntary admission itself. NBE may trap students who confuse the observation period with voluntary admission period. **B. 90 days** — This is wrong because 90 days exceeds the statutory limit for voluntary admission under Section 19 of MHA 2017. While 90 days may be relevant in other contexts (e.g., certain review periods for involuntary patients), it is not the maximum for voluntary self-admission. This option traps students who overestimate the voluntary period or confuse it with involuntary admission timelines. **D. 7 days** — This is wrong because 7 days is too restrictive for voluntary admission and does not align with MHA 2017 provisions. While short observation periods may apply in emergency contexts, the statutory voluntary admission period is longer. This option may trap students who conflate voluntary admission with brief crisis observation or those unfamiliar with the specific 30-day provision in Section 19. ## High-Yield Facts - **Section 19, MHA 2017**: Maximum voluntary admission period is **30 days** without formal review or conversion to involuntary status. - **Voluntary vs. Involuntary**: Voluntary admission requires informed consent; involuntary admission requires psychiatric examination and legal notification to State Mental Health Authority. - **Post-30 days**: After 30 days of voluntary admission, the person must be discharged OR formally converted to involuntary admission with proper legal procedures. - **Section 18, MHA 2017**: Observation period (without formal admission) is maximum **48 hours**—do not confuse with voluntary admission period. - **Indian DOC**: Voluntary admission is the preferred mode in India; involuntary admission is used only when person poses danger to self/others or is gravely disabled and refuses treatment. ## Mnemonics **VOLUNTARY-30 Rule** **V**oluntary admission = **30 days** max (Section 19, MHA 2017). After 30 days, must discharge or convert to involuntary with legal review. Use this when asked about voluntary admission timelines in MHA 2017. **48-30-90 Ladder (MHA 2017 Timelines)** **48 hours** = observation without admission (Section 18). **30 days** = voluntary admission max (Section 19). **90 days** = involuntary admission review period. Remember: observation < voluntary < involuntary in duration and legal rigor. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the 48-hour observation period (Section 18) with voluntary admission to trap students who conflate brief crisis observation with the formal voluntary admission period. Students unfamiliar with the specific 30-day provision may also be lured toward 90 days (involuntary timeline) or 7 days (arbitrary short period). ## Clinical Pearl In Indian psychiatric practice, most admissions are voluntary—a patient walks into a government or private psychiatric hospital and consents to admission. The 30-day window allows clinicians to stabilize acute presentations (depression, mania, psychosis) while respecting autonomy. If a patient improves, discharge happens; if they deteriorate and refuse further care, formal involuntary procedures (with magistrate involvement in some states) protect both patient and clinician. _Reference: Mental Healthcare Act 2017, Section 19 (Voluntary Admission); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine (Psychiatry chapter on admission procedures); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Mental Health Law in India)_
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