Background In polarised sociopolitical and information ecosystems, public-professional commentary from psychiatrists is an increasingly contested ethical space. The World Psychiatric Association (WPA) defers to local norms in this area, positioning its Member Societies as key conduits for ethical governance; the most prominent example is the American Psychiatric Association's (APA) Goldwater Rule, which forbids professional opinions on individuals in public life without examination and consent. Beyond this, the extent to which other national-level associations have operationalised comparable ethical standards is largely underexamined.Methods A cross-national analysis of all N = 145 WPA Member Societies was conducted in October 2025, examining accessible ethical codes for content addressing different forms of public-professional commentary. Specifically, these covered: press engagements, social media conduct, Goldwater-type restrictions, accuracy in public-facing statements, and misinformation prohibitions. Enforcement mechanisms were also recorded.Results Only 13 WPA Member Societies (8.96%) incorporated relevant provisions, whereas 83 (57.24%) had no identifiable ethical code. Where discernible, accuracy stipulations and Goldwater-type prohibitions predominated across socioculturally disparate contexts, with the latter closely mirroring the APA's formulation. Notably, rubric regulating social media conduct and misinformation was conspicuously sparse, as was enforcement infrastructure, with many ethical materials instituted or last revised over a decade ago.Conclusions Ethical governance of public-professional commentary remains fragmented and outdated throughout global psychiatry, generating potential ambiguities in professional expectations and reputational vulnerabilities. Accordingly, coordinated WPA and Member Society leadership, supported by periodic reviews, interdisciplinary exchanges, and educational initiatives, is essential to ensure psychiatric authority continues to be exercised responsibly amidst ongoing societal shifts.
Smith et al. (Fri,) studied this question.