GCC Nursing Practice Guide

Nursing Scope of Practice
in the GCC

Know what you are authorised to do — and what requires a physician order — before you act. Your licence, your accountability.

6
GCC Countries Covered
Growing
Advanced Practice Nursing
Varies
Scope by Country
Know First
Before You Act

What is Scope of Practice?

A foundational concept every nurse working in the GCC must understand before their first shift.

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Definition

Scope of practice defines the procedures, actions, processes and clinical decisions that a nurse is permitted to perform based on their education, training, registration level, and applicable law. It is not simply about what you are capable of doing — it is about what you are legally and professionally authorised to do.

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Why It Matters

Acting beyond your authorised scope of practice creates serious professional liability. This includes suspension or cancellation of your nursing licence, criminal prosecution in severe cases, civil liability, deportation in GCC countries, and permanent notation on your professional record. "I was asked to do it" is not a legal defence.

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How Scope is Determined

Your scope is shaped by three interlocking layers. National nursing law sets the outer boundary — the maximum permitted. Your hospital or employer policy narrows this further based on their environment, patient population and staffing. Finally, individual competency assessment confirms you are clinically safe to perform a given task.

  • National nursing law and regulation
  • Hospital and facility policy manual
  • Individual competency sign-off
  • Educational level (RN, BSN, MSN, APN)

The Three-Level Scope Framework

1
National Law — The Outer Boundary
The nursing practice act or health professions law of each GCC country sets the absolute maximum of what a registered nurse can legally do. No hospital policy can expand beyond this ceiling, though it can restrict it further.
MAXIMUM
2
Hospital Policy — The Operational Layer
Each hospital or health system defines its own policies within the national law. A government hospital may permit nurses to initiate IV fluids protocol-led; a private hospital may require a verbal or written physician order. Both can be lawful under the same national framework.
OPERATIONAL
3
Individual Competency — The Practical Gate
Even if national law and hospital policy allow a task, you can only perform it if you have been individually assessed as competent. Annual competency assessments, orientation checklists and skills sign-offs determine your personal authorised scope.
INDIVIDUAL

GCC vs Western Scope Comparison

How nursing scope in UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar compares to UK, Australia and USA frameworks. Differences are more nuanced than many nurses expect.

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Important: Home Country Training Does Not Transfer Automatically

Completing a procedure in your home country does not automatically authorise it in a GCC country. You must check the national law, your facility policy, and ensure you have obtained local competency sign-off for each clinical skill.

Task / Procedure UK / Australia USA UAE Saudi Arabia Qatar
Independent prescribing Yes (NP qualified) Yes (NP, varies by state) Limited (APN only) Very limited Limited (APN pathway)
IV medication administration Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Blood transfusion initiation Yes (with training) Yes (with training) Yes (with protocol) Yes (with protocol) Yes (with protocol)
Blood transfusion monitoring Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Chest drain insertion No (unless advanced trained) Some advanced nurses No (physician only) No (physician only) No (physician only)
Foley catheter insertion Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Nasogastric tube insertion Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Wound suturing Limited (wound care nurses) Some states (NP/APRN) No (usually physician) No (usually physician) No (usually physician)
IV cannula insertion Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Phlebotomy / blood draw Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Pain management protocols Yes (protocol-based) Yes (protocol-based) Hospital-dependent Hospital-dependent Hospital-dependent
Independent patient discharge Nurse-led in some settings Some settings (CNS) Physician order required Physician order required Physician order required
Initiating resuscitation (CPR) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Controlled drug administration Yes (with 2nd checker) Yes (with order) Yes (physician order required) Yes (physician order required) Yes (physician order required)

Table reflects general national frameworks. Individual hospital policies may vary. Always verify with your specific employer and local regulatory body. Last reviewed April 2026.

Country-by-Country Scope Guide

Select your GCC country to view the specific scope of practice framework, regulatory body, and permitted versus restricted tasks.

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United Arab Emirates
Regulated by DOH (Abu Dhabi), DHA (Dubai), MOHAP (Federal) & HAAD frameworks

Governing Framework

  • UAE Federal Law No. 10 of 2008 (Medical Liability)
  • DOH Health Professionals Licensing Standards
  • DHA Scope of Practice — Registered Nurse
  • MOHAP nursing practice standards (federal facilities)
  • JCI-accredited hospitals may have additional policies

Permitted RN Tasks

  • IV cannula insertion and management
  • Blood draw and phlebotomy
  • Oral, IV, IM, SC medication administration
  • NGT insertion and management
  • Urinary catheterisation (male and female)
  • Wound assessment and dressing changes
  • Vital signs monitoring and documentation
  • Patient and family education
  • Initiating CPR
  • Blood transfusion monitoring
  • Isolation procedures

Requires Physician Order

  • Controlled/narcotic drug administration
  • Prescribing or changing medications
  • Blood transfusion initiation (order required)
  • Wound debridement (beyond simple dressing)
  • Patient discharge authorisation
  • Restraint application
  • DNR order
  • Chest drain insertion
  • Suturing of wounds
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Saudi Arabia
Regulated by Saudi Commission for Health Specialties (SCHS) — Saudi Nursing Council

Governing Framework

  • Saudi Nursing Practice Law
  • SCHS Professional Classification Standards
  • Ministry of Health nursing standards (MOH facilities)
  • CBAHI accreditation standards (Saudi Joint Commission)
  • Hospital-specific clinical practice guidelines

Permitted RN Tasks

  • IV line insertion and management
  • Medication administration (all routes)
  • Blood draw and specimen collection
  • NGT insertion and feeding management
  • Urinary catheterisation
  • Wound care and dressing changes
  • Patient monitoring and assessment
  • Initiating CPR
  • Patient education and discharge teaching
  • Vital signs and early warning score management

Requires Physician Order

  • All narcotic and controlled drug administration
  • Medication prescribing (even verbal)
  • Blood transfusion initiation
  • Patient restraint orders
  • Discharge orders
  • DNR decisions
  • Any invasive procedure beyond core scope
  • IV fluid therapy initiation (most facilities)
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Qatar
Regulated by Qatar Council for Healthcare Practitioners (QCHP)

Governing Framework

  • Qatar Law No. 13 of 2002 (Health Professions)
  • QCHP Scope of Practice — Registered Nurse
  • Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) nursing policies
  • SIDRA Medicine institutional standards
  • Primary Health Care Corporation (PHCC) framework

Permitted RN Tasks

  • IV access insertion and maintenance
  • All medication administration routes
  • Phlebotomy and specimen collection
  • NGT placement and management
  • Foley catheter insertion
  • Wound assessment and dressing
  • Vital signs and patient monitoring
  • CPR initiation
  • Patient education
  • Blood transfusion monitoring

Requires Physician Order

  • Controlled drug administration
  • Prescribing in any form
  • Patient discharge
  • DNR orders
  • Physical restraints
  • Blood transfusion initiation
  • Advanced airway management (beyond BVM)
  • Wound suturing
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Kuwait
Regulated by Kuwait Ministry of Health (MOH) — Nursing Affairs Department

Governing Framework

  • Kuwait Health Law and nursing regulations
  • Ministry of Health Nursing Circular Instructions
  • Kuwait Nursing Society guidelines
  • Ministry of Health hospital policy manuals
  • Private hospital accreditation (JCI where applicable)

Permitted RN Tasks

  • IV cannula insertion and management
  • Medication administration (all routes)
  • Blood sampling and phlebotomy
  • NGT insertion and care
  • Urinary catheterisation
  • Wound care and dressing
  • Patient monitoring
  • CPR initiation
  • Patient education
  • Documentation and care planning

Requires Physician Order

  • Narcotic drug administration
  • All medication prescribing
  • Blood transfusion initiation
  • Physical restraints
  • Discharge authorisation
  • DNR orders
  • Invasive procedures beyond core nursing scope
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Bahrain
Regulated by National Health Regulatory Authority (NHRA) of Bahrain

Governing Framework

  • Bahrain Health Law and professional regulations
  • NHRA Scope of Practice for Nurses
  • NHRA licensing standards (General Nurse, Senior Nurse)
  • Bahrain Defence Force Hospital protocols
  • King Hamad University Hospital JCI standards

Permitted RN Tasks

  • IV access management
  • All standard medication routes
  • Blood sampling
  • NGT insertion and management
  • Urinary catheterisation
  • Wound care
  • Patient monitoring and vital signs
  • CPR initiation
  • Patient education

Requires Physician Order

  • Controlled substance administration
  • Prescribing any medications
  • Blood transfusion commencement
  • Patient restraints
  • Discharge orders
  • DNR decisions
  • Procedures beyond competency sign-off
🇴🇲
Oman
Regulated by Oman Medical Specialty Board (OMSB) — Oman Nursing Council (ONC)

Governing Framework

  • Oman Health Law and nursing regulations
  • Oman Nursing Council scope of practice documents
  • Royal Hospital and Sultan Qaboos University Hospital policies
  • Ministry of Health Oman nursing circulars
  • OMSB credential verification process

Permitted RN Tasks

  • IV cannulation and line management
  • Medication administration (all routes)
  • Phlebotomy and blood sampling
  • NGT insertion and management
  • Urinary catheter insertion
  • Wound assessment and dressing
  • Vital signs monitoring
  • CPR initiation
  • Patient and carer education
  • Documentation and care planning

Requires Physician Order

  • Controlled drugs administration
  • Prescribing medications
  • Blood transfusion initiation
  • Physical restraints
  • Patient discharge
  • DNR orders
  • Invasive procedures outside core scope

Advanced Practice Nursing in the GCC

The APN/NP role is expanding across all GCC countries. Understanding this pathway can unlock wider scope, greater autonomy and significant salary premiums.

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What is an APN in the GCC Context?

Advanced Practice Nurses (APN) in GCC countries hold a Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) or equivalent, with substantial clinical experience and registration at an advanced level with the national regulatory body. They are authorised to perform clinical assessment, differential diagnosis, ordering investigations, and in some countries, limited prescribing that is beyond the scope of a registered nurse. The role remains more restricted than an NP in the USA or UK, but the scope is expanding rapidly, particularly in the UAE and Qatar.

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UAE: DOH / DHA Advanced Practice Nurse
HAAD/DOH APN Category
The UAE has the most developed APN framework in the GCC. The DOH (Abu Dhabi) and DHA (Dubai) both recognise an Advanced Practice Nurse category. APNs can conduct independent patient assessments, formulate nursing diagnoses, develop care plans, order select investigations, and in approved settings may have limited prescriptive authority. Registration at APN level requires MSN plus a minimum of 3 years post-MSN clinical experience and successful APN credentialing examination.
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Saudi Arabia: SCHS Senior Specialist Nurse
Saudi Commission for Health Specialties
Saudi Arabia classifies nurses through the SCHS professional classification system, which includes a Senior Specialist Nurse category. This grade allows expanded clinical practice within approved clinical settings, particularly in critical care, oncology, and community health. Prescribing authority remains very limited and is typically protocol-based with physician oversight. The Vision 2030 healthcare transformation is accelerating APN development across Saudi facilities.
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Qatar: QCHP APN Registration
Qatar Council for Healthcare Practitioners
Qatar through QCHP recognises an Advanced Practice Nurse registration category. HMC (Hamad Medical Corporation) and SIDRA Medicine have deployed APN roles particularly in primary care and specialist outpatient settings. APNs at these institutions have broader assessment and care management authority. Qatar is developing a formal APN prescribing framework, with limited collaborative prescribing models in trial phases at select facilities.
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Kuwait, Bahrain & Oman: Emerging
APN frameworks in development
Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman are at earlier stages of APN framework development. Clinical nurse specialist (CNS) roles exist in major hospitals, and nurses with MSN qualifications are often given expanded clinical responsibilities informally. Formal APN registration with defined scope of practice and prescribing pathways are under development in all three countries. Nurses with MSN qualifications in these countries should clarify scope with their specific employer and regulatory body.

APN Scope vs RN Scope — Key Differences

APN Additional Scope (where authorised)

  • + Independent comprehensive patient assessment
  • + Formulating differential diagnoses
  • + Ordering diagnostic investigations (facility-dependent)
  • + Limited prescribing (country and facility-dependent)
  • + Independent chronic disease management (some settings)
  • + Leading clinical education and research
  • + Nurse-led clinics in primary care settings
20–30%
APN salary premium above equivalent RN grade

APN Registration Requirements

1
MSN or equivalent — Master of Science in Nursing from recognised institution
2
Clinical experience — minimum 3–5 years post-basic RN practice
3
APN examination — credentialing exam with national regulatory body
4
Specialty certification — e.g. ACNP, FNP, CNS or equivalent preferred
5
Facility credentialing — hospital privilege approval at APN level

What Requires a Physician Order in GCC

These tasks are commonly misunderstood. In most GCC hospitals, the following require an explicit physician order before a nurse can act — regardless of urgency or established practice at your previous workplace.

In all six GCC countries, the administration of controlled or narcotic medications requires a valid physician order in the patient's medical record or medication administration record. This includes opioid analgesics (morphine, fentanyl, tramadol), benzodiazepines, and any Schedule 1 or Schedule 2 controlled substance. A verbal order from a physician does not remove the documentation requirement — the order must be documented contemporaneously or within the timeframe specified by your hospital policy. Double-checking with a second registered nurse is standard practice across GCC hospitals for controlled drugs.

Never administer a controlled drug based on a historical order that has not been renewed, or based on an informal verbal instruction without proper documentation.

While IV fluid management is clearly within nursing scope once ordered, initiating IV fluids — that is, starting a new IV fluid regimen or choosing the type and rate of fluid — typically requires a physician order in GCC hospitals. Some hospitals, particularly those with JCI accreditation or protocol-driven critical care units, may have standing orders or nurse-initiated fluid resuscitation protocols approved by medical governance. Outside of such protocols, a nurse should not independently decide to start IV fluids.

If you are concerned about a patient's hydration status or haemodynamic stability and cannot immediately reach the physician, document your assessment, escalate through the charge nurse or medical emergency team (MET/RRT), and follow your hospital's escalation pathway.

There is an important distinction between initiating a blood transfusion and monitoring it. Across all GCC countries, nurses are responsible for monitoring the patient during a transfusion, identifying and responding to transfusion reactions, and managing the transfusion rate. However, initiating the transfusion — hanging the blood product and commencing the infusion — requires a physician order in virtually all GCC hospitals.

The order must specify blood product type, volume, rate, and any pre-medications. Two-nurse verification of blood product compatibility with patient identification is mandatory across all GCC accredited facilities. Never initiate a transfusion based on a verbal order alone without documented authorisation.

The application of any form of physical restraint — including wrist restraints, vest restraints, or mitts — is a restrictive practice that requires a physician order in all GCC countries. In emergency situations where a patient presents immediate danger and a physician is not immediately available, you must document the emergency application, notify the physician immediately, obtain a retrospective order, and reassess the patient at defined intervals (typically every 1–2 hours).

Restraint use must be documented comprehensively, including clinical justification, type of restraint, time applied, monitoring frequency, and patient response. Inadequately documented restraint use is a common patient rights violation finding in GCC hospital audits.

DNR decisions are medical and ethical decisions that require a physician order, with appropriate patient and family consultation in most GCC frameworks. A nurse cannot independently decide to withhold resuscitation. If a patient arrests without a valid DNR order, initiate CPR and call for help while simultaneously attempting to locate the physician.

If you believe a DNR discussion is clinically appropriate for a patient, document your nursing assessment of the patient's condition, discuss with the physician, and advocate for a goals-of-care conversation through appropriate channels. In Islamic contexts — which form the ethical framework of GCC healthcare — the concept of withholding life-sustaining treatment involves religious and family considerations that must be handled sensitively and through the proper medical and pastoral channels.

While nurses play the central role in discharge planning (identifying patient education needs, arranging home medications, coordinating follow-up), the actual discharge authorisation requires a physician order in all GCC countries. A nurse cannot instruct a patient that they are medically cleared to leave.

If a patient wants to leave without physician authorisation, this becomes an "against medical advice" (AMA) situation. Your hospital will have a specific protocol for this, typically involving having the patient sign an AMA form, notifying the physician, and documenting the situation thoroughly. If a patient leaves without signing out properly, document the circumstances in detail.

Nurses across GCC countries are authorised to perform wound assessment and standard dressing changes. However, wound debridement — the removal of necrotic, devitalised, or infected tissue — typically requires a physician order and in many cases should be performed by or in the presence of a physician or wound care specialist, depending on the method and extent.

Sharp debridement at the bedside is generally considered a medical procedure in most GCC hospitals. Enzymatic or autolytic debridement using prescribed wound products may fall within nursing scope with an appropriate order. If you are a certified wound care nurse, clarify with your nurse manager and medical team what specific wound management procedures are within your credentialled scope at your facility.

Core RN Procedures — Within Scope in All GCC

These procedures are within the standard registered nurse scope of practice across all six GCC countries, subject to individual competency sign-off and hospital policy confirmation.

IV cannula insertion and maintenance
Blood draw and phlebotomy
Oral medication administration
IV medication administration (with order)
Intramuscular injection (IM)
Subcutaneous injection (SC)
Nasogastric tube insertion
NGT feeding management
Urinary catheterisation (female)
Urinary catheterisation (male)
Wound dressing and assessment
Vital signs monitoring
12-lead ECG recording
Oxygen therapy application
Suctioning (oral, nasal, ETT)
Patient education (all health topics)
Comprehensive patient assessment
Nursing care plan development
Blood transfusion monitoring
CPR initiation and BLS
Isolation precautions
Falls risk assessment
Pressure injury prevention
Documentation and clinical records
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Always confirm individual competency sign-off

Being on this list means the task is within RN scope nationally. It does not automatically mean you are authorised to perform it at your specific hospital. All nurses must complete the facility's orientation competency assessments for each procedure. Check your competency record before performing any procedure you have not been signed off for at your current employer.

Liability & Professional Accountability

Understanding your professional accountability is the most important protection you have. Ignorance of the scope is not a legal defence in any GCC jurisdiction.

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Consequences of Acting Outside Scope
  • Formal complaint to national regulatory body
  • Nursing licence suspension or cancellation
  • Employment termination and HR investigation
  • Visa cancellation and deportation proceedings
  • Criminal liability under medical liability law (UAE Law No. 10/2008, Saudi equivalents)
  • Civil liability if patient harm resulted
  • Permanent notation on DATAFLOW/PROMETRICS records
  • Difficulty obtaining future GCC employment
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"I was told to do it" is NOT a defence

In every GCC jurisdiction, a nurse is personally and professionally responsible for every clinical action they perform. If a physician, charge nurse, or senior colleague asks you to perform a task outside your scope, you are not protected by following that instruction. The instruction does not transfer the liability — it remains with you as the person who acted.

How to Safely Decline an Out-of-Scope Request

  1. Remain calm and professional — this is a clinical safety matter, not a personal conflict
  2. Clearly state that you are not authorised to perform the task
  3. Suggest who can perform it (physician, APN, or qualified colleague)
  4. Document the request and your response in clinical notes if appropriate
  5. If pressured, escalate to your charge nurse or nurse manager
  6. If the issue persists, use your hospital's clinical ethics or compliance reporting channel
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Documenting Escalated or Refused Requests

When you decline a task due to scope concerns, or when you escalate a request that was inappropriate, document it. Use objective, factual language. Record the date, time, who made the request, what was requested, your response, and any escalation taken. This protects you in any subsequent review or complaint process. If your hospital has an incident reporting system (such as an electronic safety event form), a scope-of-practice concern may be appropriate to log.

Professional Script — Declining an Out-of-Scope Request

CLINICAL SCRIPT
"Doctor [Name], I want to make sure I support you and the patient appropriately. I'm not authorised to perform [task] within my current scope of practice here at [hospital name]. I'll need a physician to complete that, or I can check whether our APN / clinical nurse specialist can assist. Would you like me to escalate that now?"

Use this language: calm, collaborative, solution-focused. Avoid confrontational language. Always offer a pathway forward.

Independent Nursing Interventions

These are nursing actions that fall entirely within your independent professional scope — no physician order required. They are core to nursing practice and nursing's distinct professional identity.

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Patient Repositioning
Regular repositioning to prevent pressure injuries is an independent nursing intervention. You do not need a physician order to turn a patient every 2 hours. Document in the nursing notes and skin assessment tool.
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Patient and Family Education
Teaching patients about their condition, medications, procedures, and discharge needs is an autonomous nursing function. It does not require a physician order — it requires clinical knowledge and communication skill.
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Comfort Measures
Repositioning for comfort, providing pillows, adjusting lighting and temperature, offering water (if permitted), and general comfort-focused interventions are within independent nursing scope.
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Ambulation Assistance
Assisting a patient to mobilise safely — provided they are medically stable and no physician instruction to restrict mobility exists — is within nursing scope. Always assess safety first and document mobility status.
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Oral Care
Oral hygiene is a fundamental nursing intervention, particularly for intubated and unconscious patients where oral hygiene is linked to ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) prevention. No physician order required.
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Emotional Support and Therapeutic Communication
Providing emotional support, active listening, responding to patient anxiety and distress, and facilitating family communication is an independent nursing function. This is often the most powerful thing a nurse does.
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Safety Monitoring and Falls Prevention
Conducting safety rounds, applying falls risk interventions (bed alarms, non-slip socks, call bell within reach), and monitoring for clinical deterioration are autonomous nursing responsibilities.
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Personal Hygiene Assistance
Bathing, hair washing, skin care and basic hygiene support are within independent nursing scope. Dignified, culturally sensitive delivery of personal care is a core nursing function.
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Clinical Assessment and Documentation
Performing and documenting a comprehensive nursing assessment — vital signs, pain scores, neurological observations, fluid balance, skin integrity — is an independent nursing function and a professional obligation.

Scope of Practice Self-Assessment Checklist

Track your readiness to practise within the appropriate scope in your GCC country. Saved automatically in your browser.

Your Progress 0 / 10 completed
Read and understood the national nursing law for my GCC country of practice
Read and understood my hospital's nursing policy manual and scope of practice document
Know which specific tasks require a physician order in my hospital (not just in general)
Know how to escalate out-of-scope requests professionally and without confrontation
Know the APN/Advanced Practice pathway if I want to expand my scope in future
Completed all required hospital competency assessments and orientation sign-offs
Know how to document scope-related decisions, escalations and refused requests
Spoken with my nurse manager to clarify any scope uncertainties specific to my unit
Know the contact details for my national regulatory body if I have a scope query
Reviewed the differences between my home country scope (NMC/AHPRA/PRC/other) and GCC scope

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from nurses arriving in the GCC about scope of practice, authority, and professional boundaries.

Training and authorisation are two separate things. Being trained to perform a procedure in your home country means you have the knowledge and skill — it does not mean you are authorised to perform it in your GCC country of practice. Authorisation comes from three sources working together: the national nursing law of your GCC country, your specific hospital's policy, and your individual competency sign-off at that facility.

For example, a UK nurse trained in nurse-led IV cannulation is trained for the task, but they must still complete the hospital's IV cannulation competency assessment in UAE before performing it. Similarly, an Australian NP with prescribing authority has no prescribing rights in Saudi Arabia unless they hold an APN designation recognised by SCHS.

Yes, often significantly. The national nursing law sets the same ceiling for both sectors, but hospital policies differ considerably. Private hospitals — particularly those with JCI accreditation — tend to have more detailed written nursing policies and may operate nurse-led protocols (such as IV fluid initiation, pain management algorithms, and sepsis bundles) that effectively expand the operational scope of nurses compared to some government facilities.

Government hospitals in GCC countries may operate more conservatively, requiring physician orders for tasks that a JCI-accredited private hospital manages through approved standing orders. Conversely, government hospitals may have more experienced nursing leadership and clearer escalation structures. Always read your specific employer's policy manual during orientation — do not assume practices are the same as your previous employer.

Prescribing authority for nurses is very limited across all GCC countries. The most advanced framework exists in the UAE, where DOH-registered Advanced Practice Nurses in specific settings may have limited prescriptive authority — typically for a defined formulary of medications within a specific specialty area, and often in a collaborative prescribing model with physician oversight.

Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman do not currently have established independent nurse prescribing frameworks for general RNs. Some APN-level practitioners in these countries may operate collaborative prescribing arrangements informally within their facilities, but this is not formally codified in national law for most nurses.

If prescribing authority is important to your practice, the UAE provides the clearest pathway through the DOH/DHA APN category.

Politely but clearly decline, explain your position, and offer an alternative pathway. Use the script approach: remain professional, state that you are not authorised for the specific task, suggest who can perform it, and ask how you can assist appropriately.

If you feel pressured or if the issue recurs, escalate to your charge nurse or nurse manager. Document any pressure you receive. If the situation involves a patient safety risk, use your hospital's clinical concern or incident reporting system.

Remember: the physician may be testing your professionalism, they may not know your scope, or they may genuinely need guidance. Approach the conversation as a collaborative clinical safety matter. Most requests are made in good faith without awareness of your specific scope boundaries.

No. Your home country training and registration demonstrate your education and competency level, which is why they are accepted for GCC licensing purposes — but they do not transfer clinical authorisation. Once you hold a GCC nursing licence, your scope of practice is determined by GCC national law and your employer's policy, not by the scope you had in your home country.

This is particularly important for nurses from the UK, Australia and USA where nursing scope — especially for NPs and APNs — is broader than GCC equivalents. Do not assume you can perform independently in GCC what you could perform independently at home unless you have verified it against local frameworks.

Yes, in two ways. First, completing additional certifications and training that your hospital recognises can expand your individual competency-authorised scope within your current registration level. For example, completing an advanced wound care course may allow you to perform procedures that other RNs on your unit are not sign-off to perform.

Second, advancing your registration to APN level — by completing an MSN, gaining clinical experience, and passing the APN credentialing process with your national regulatory body — will formally expand your scope to the APN level as defined in national law. This is the pathway to gaining assessment, ordering and potentially prescribing authority in GCC countries.

However, no amount of additional training expands your scope beyond the national law ceiling. An RN in Saudi Arabia who completes a wound care course still cannot suture — that remains outside nursing scope under Saudi law regardless of training.

In terms of clinical authorisation to perform specific procedures, there is generally no formal difference between an RN (diploma-level) and a BSN (degree-level) nurse in terms of scope of practice in GCC countries. Both hold registered nurse status and operate within the same RN scope. The BSN qualification does not automatically grant additional clinical procedures.

However, BSN nurses in GCC hospitals are typically classified at a higher salary grade, may progress more quickly to senior and charge nurse roles, and are given preference for leadership and specialist positions. The BSN qualification is also the prerequisite for APN/MSN-level progression, which is where formal scope expansion occurs.

In practice, more experienced nurses — regardless of qualification level — are often trusted with more complex tasks and may receive facility-level authorisation for additional competencies. But this is competency-based, not qualification-based at RN versus BSN level.

Your first resource should always be your hospital's nursing policy manual or clinical guidelines — most GCC hospitals with JCI accreditation have these available on the intranet. If that does not resolve the question, ask your charge nurse or nurse manager, who should be familiar with the specific policies of your unit.

If the matter concerns your professional registration or national scope, contact your regulatory body directly:

  • UAE (Abu Dhabi): DOH licensing department — doh.gov.ae
  • UAE (Dubai): DHA licensing — dha.gov.ae
  • Saudi Arabia: SCHS — schs.gov.sa
  • Qatar: QCHP — qchp.org.qa
  • Bahrain: NHRA — nhra.gov.bh
  • Oman: OMSB — omsb.org
  • Kuwait: MOH Nursing Department — moh.gov.kw

When in doubt — pause, ask, document. Never act on uncertainty alone.

Related GCC Nursing Guides

Continue building your knowledge base for safe and successful GCC nursing practice.