A diagnosis of anxiety or depression is not a career liability — it is a legally protected condition. Across most jurisdictions, your employer cannot fire you for it, cannot ignore your accommodation requests, and cannot treat you worse because of it. Here's exactly what the law says and how to enforce it.
If you were dismissed after disclosing anxiety or depression — document the timeline now. The connection between a mental health disclosure and an adverse employment action is powerful evidence of disability discrimination. Write down the exact dates you disclosed, what happened next, and when the adverse action occurred.
✅ Your Rights — and What Employers Are Doing Illegally
✅ YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO
Keep your diagnosis private — you don't have to name it
Request reasonable accommodation based on functional limitations
Take medically certified sick leave without penalty
Return to work after leave without demotion or reduced duties
Work in an environment free from harassment related to your condition
File a discrimination complaint if you experience adverse treatment
🚫 YOUR EMPLOYER CANNOT
Fire you because of your anxiety or depression diagnosis
Demote you or reduce your pay after a mental health disclosure
Require you to prove your condition meets an arbitrary internal standard
Share your mental health information beyond those who need to know
Subject you to performance management designed to force you out during a health episode
Refuse all accommodation without genuinely exploring options
🌍 Anxiety and Depression Protection by Country
🇨🇦
Canada — Quebec and Ontario
Quebec Charter and LNT: Mental health conditions including anxiety and depression are disabilities protected under the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms. Employer must accommodate to the point of undue hardship — which includes flexible arrangements, modified duties, and leave. The CNESST protects against reprisal for exercising rights. CNESST: 1-844-838-0808.
Ontario Human Rights Code: Mental health disability is explicitly a protected ground. Employers must accommodate to the point of undue hardship. Dismissal or adverse treatment for reasons related to mental health disability is prohibited. HRTO processes human rights complaints without cost to the claimant.
Both provinces — sick leave: Short-term and long-term disability benefits may be available through employer group insurance, Employment Insurance (EI) sickness benefits (up to 26 weeks), and Quebec's RQAP.
🇺🇸
United States
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA): Anxiety disorders and major depression that substantially limit major life activities (including the ability to concentrate, sleep, or interact with others) qualify as disabilities. Employers with 15+ employees must provide reasonable accommodation and cannot discriminate.
FMLA: Employees may be entitled to up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave per year for a serious health condition — including mental health conditions requiring inpatient care or continuing treatment.
File with: EEOC — 1-800-669-4000. Deadline: 180/300 days from discriminatory act.
🇬🇧
United Kingdom
Equality Act 2010: Anxiety and depression that substantially impair normal day-to-day activities and have lasted or are expected to last 12+ months qualify as disabilities. Employer must make reasonable adjustments. Failure to do so is a distinct head of disability discrimination.
Common accommodations ordered by Tribunals: Phased return to work, flexible hours, modified workload, redeployment to lower-stress role, regular check-ins with occupational health.
File with: ACAS then Employment Tribunal. Deadline: 3 months less 1 day.
🇫🇷
France
Code du Travail — disability protection: Recognized mental health disabilities (RQTH) provide employment protection, accommodation obligations, and access to employment integration support. Employers cannot dismiss based on a medical condition without following a specific incapacity procedure.
Sick leave protection: During a medically certified arrêt de travail, the employer cannot dismiss the employee except for reasons completely unrelated to the illness or for economic grounds.
File with:Conseil de prud'hommes for employment claims; MDPH for disability recognition.
📝 Steps to Protect Your Rights
1Get a medical record that reflects your work situation
Tell your doctor what is happening at work — how the environment or the harassment is contributing to your anxiety or depression. A medical record that specifically mentions work-related factors creates the evidentiary link between your employer's conduct and your condition. This matters for both accommodation requests and any future claims.
2Document any adverse treatment that follows disclosure
If your employer's behavior toward you changes after they become aware of your mental health condition — write it down immediately. Date, time, what was said or done, who was present. The timeline connecting disclosure to adverse treatment is the core of a disability discrimination claim.
3Request accommodation in writing — and keep the response
Put your accommodation request in writing to HR, with a doctor's note supporting the functional limitations. Keep a copy of everything you send and receive. If the employer denies accommodation without properly exploring options, that denial and its reasoning becomes the evidence of the breach.
4File externally if rights are violated
In Canada — CNESST (QC) or HRTO (ON). In the US — EEOC. In the UK — ACAS then Employment Tribunal. In France — prud'hommes. The filing fee for human rights and employment tribunal claims is typically zero — these systems are designed to be accessible. Get legal advice on the strongest grounds for your specific situation.
🔍 Frequently Asked Questions
"My employer gave me a PIP right after I told them about my depression. What does that mean legally?"
A performance improvement plan issued shortly after a mental health disclosure is a significant red flag and may constitute disability discrimination. The timing is legally important — courts and tribunals are alert to "performance management" that starts suspiciously after a disclosure or accommodation request. Document the exact dates: when you disclosed, when the PIP was issued, and the stated reason. Compare the timing to your most recent performance reviews — if they were positive before the disclosure, the sudden PIP is very difficult for the employer to explain legitimately. Consult a lawyer immediately — this pattern is well-recognized in discrimination case law.
"I took mental health leave and came back to find my role had been changed. Is that legal?"
In most jurisdictions, employees have the right to return to the same or equivalent role after protected medical leave. Returning from leave to find a demotion, reduced responsibilities, or a materially different role without your consent may constitute discrimination and/or constructive dismissal. In Quebec, the Act Respecting Labour Standards explicitly protects the right to return to the same position. In the UK, an employee returning from long-term sick leave is entitled to return to the same job if reasonably practicable. Document the changes and get legal advice — the employer typically bears the burden of justifying why the original role was no longer available.
⏰ Filing Deadlines for Mental Health Discrimination