%0 Journal Article %T Balancing Public Health and Personal Rights: An Ethical Framework for Mandatory Outpatient Psychiatric Treatment %A Nisha Gurung %A Prakash Rai %J Asian Journal of Ethics in Health and Medicine %@ 3108-5059 %D 2025 %V 5 %N 1 %R 10.51847/4Ojq3HDF85 %P 112-120 %X Compulsory treatments legally mandate care for individuals—typically those with mental disorders—who refuse therapeutic interventions and pose a danger to themselves or others. Compulsory outpatient treatment (COT), also called a community treatment order, extends this involuntary care from hospital settings into the community. Although implemented in over 75 jurisdictions globally, COT remains one of the most debated practices in psychiatry and raises significant ethical concerns. Despite extensive discussion, ethical considerations often remain theoretical, focusing on arguments for or against compulsory treatment, while offering limited practical guidance for clinicians making decisions about implementing COT. Current evidence regarding the effectiveness of COT is inconclusive. Consequently, while several countries use COT, supporting data are inconsistent and debatable. In such ambiguous contexts, ethical guidance becomes crucial. This paper provides an ethical examination of COT through the principlist framework proposed by Ross Upshur in 2002, initially developed to justify public health interventions during the 2002–2004 severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak. We critically analyze the applicability of Upshur’s principles of harm, proportionality, reciprocity, and transparency in decisions regarding the initiation of COT. Upshur’s principlist framework serves as a valuable tool for ethically reflecting on the use of COT, offering guidance to support more ethically sound decision-making in psychiatric practice. %U https://smerpub.com/article/balancing-public-health-and-personal-rights-an-ethical-framework-for-mandatory-outpatient-psychiatr-hyusdoposwwdtt1