Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counseling: A Practical Guide

Lýsing:
The ethics book no psychology student or professional should be without Thoroughly updated and expanded to include recent research findings, landmark legal decisions, the Hoffman Investigation Report, and changes in the ethical guidelines of the American Psychological Association and the Canadian Psychological Association, the new 5th edition of Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counseling covers the latest developments in ethical thinking, standards, and practice.
You'll learn how to strengthen your ethical awareness, judgement, and decision-making. Distinguished Emeritus Professor Don Meichenbaum described the 5th edition as 'a MUST READ book for both beginning and seasoned clinicians' and Professor David H. Barlow wrote, 'A stunningly good book. . . . If there is only one book you buy on ethics, this is the one. ' Covers the many changes and challenges brought about by new technology, EHRs, videoconferencing, and texting, as well as practicing across state and provincial borders Discusses moral distress and moral courage Includes 5 chapters on different aspects of critical thinking about ethical challenges, including a chapter on 'Ethics Placebos, Cons, and Creative Cheating: A User's Guide' Deals with complex issue of culture, race, religion, sexual identity, sexual orientation, and politics Provides steps to strengthen ethics in organizations Offers guidance on responding to ethics, licensing, and malpractice complaints— not to imply that you'll need to after reading this book! Keeps the focus on practical, creative approaches to the responsibilities, challenges, and opportunities encountered by therapists and counselors in their work.
Annað
- Höfundar: Kenneth S. Pope, Melba J. T. Vasquez
- Útgáfa:5
- Útgáfudagur: 2016-01-18
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- Format:ePub
- ISBN 13: 9781119195467
- Print ISBN: 9781119195443
- ISBN 10: 1119195462
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Critical Praise for Ethics In Psychotherapy and Counseling
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- A Note on Terminology
- Chapter 1: Strengthening Ethical Intelligence: What Do I Do Now?
- Chapter 2: Ethics in Real Life: Grad School Didn't Prepare Us for This
- Computer Coincidences
- Life in Chaos
- Evaluating Children
- The Fatal Disease
- The Mechanic
- The Postdoctoral Experience
- Staying Sober
- Chapter 3: The Human Therapist and the (Sometimes) Inhuman Relationship: Being Absent in the Present
- Chapter 4: Avoiding Pseudoscience, Fads, and Academic Urban Legends
- Chapter 5: Ethical Judgment Under Uncertainty and Pressure: Critical Thinking About Heuristics, Authorities, and Groups
- Cognitive Commitments
- Authorities
- Groups
- WYSIATI
- Imaginative Illusions
- Chapter 6: 26 Logical Fallacies in Ethical Reasoning
- 1. Ad Hoc Rationalization
- 2. Ad Hominem or Ad Feminam
- 3. Affirming the Consequent
- 4. Appeal to Ignorance (Ad Ignorantium)
- 5. Argument to Logic (Argumentum ad Logicam)
- 6. Begging the Question (Petitio Principii)
- 7. Composition Fallacy
- 8. Denying the Antecedent
- 9. Disjunctive Fallacy
- 10. Division Fallacy
- 11. Existential Fallacy
- 12. False Analogy
- 13. False Continuum
- 14. False Dilemma
- 15. False Equivalence
- 16. Genetic Fallacy
- 17. Golden Mean Fallacy
- 18. Ignoratio Elenchi
- 19. Mistaking Deductive Validity for Truth
- 20. Naturalistic Fallacy
- 21. Nominal Fallacy
- 22. Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc (After This, Therefore on Account of This)
- 23. Red Herring
- 24. Slippery Slope (Also Known as the Camel's Nose Fallacy)
- 25. Straw Person
- 26. You Too! (Tu Quoque)
- Chapter 7: Using and Misusing Words to Reveal and Conceal
- Substitute the General for the Specific
- Use a Conditional Frame for Consequences
- Use Denied Motivation as Misdirection
- Use the Abstract Language of Technicalities
- Use the Passive Voice
- Make Unimportant by Contrasting With What Did Not Occur
- Replace Intentional Unethical Behavior With the Language of Accidents, Misfortune, and Mistakes
- Smother the Events in the Language of Attack
- Chapter 8: Ethics Placebos, Cons, and Creative Cheating: A User's Guide
- Chapter 9: Trust, Power, and Caring
- Trust
- Power
- Caring
- Chapter 10: Moral Distress and Moral Courage
- Chapter 11: The Ethics of Teletherapy, Internet Therapy, and Other Digital Work: Challenges of the New Technologies
- Risks, Downsides, and Disasters
- Five Special Pitfalls
- Questions to Assess Uses of Digital Media
- Chapter 12: Competence and the Human Therapist
- Competence as an Ethical and Legal Responsibility
- Competence and Conflict
- Intellectual Competence: Knowing About and Knowing How
- Emotional Competence for Therapy: Knowing Yourself
- Chapter 13: Creating—and Using—Strategies for Self-Care
- Paying Attention to the Self
- What Happens When Self-Care Is Neglected
- Making Sure the Strategies Fit
- The Need for Change
- Chapter 14: Creating a Professional Will
- Who Takes Charge?
- Who Serves as Backup?
- Coordinated Planning
- Your Office, Its Key, and Its Security
- Your Schedule
- Client Records and Contact Information
- Avenues of Communication for Clients and Colleagues
- New Messages for Your Answering Machine, E-mail Account, and So On
- Informed Consent
- Client Notification
- Colleague Notification
- Professional Liability Coverage
- Attorney for Professional Issues
- Billing Records, Procedures, and Instructions
- Expenses
- Your Personal Will
- Legal Review
- Copies of the Professional Will
- Review and Update
- Chapter 15: Codes and Complaints in Context: Historical, Empirical, and Actuarial Foundations
- Mechanisms of Accountability
- Ethics Committees, Codes, and Complaints
- Patterns of Ethics Complaints for CPA and APA
- The Hoffman Report
- Licensing Boards
- Civil Statutes and Case Law
- Criminal Statutes
- Conclusion
- Chapter 16: Responding to Ethics, Licensing, or Malpractice Complaints
- Don't Panic
- Consult Your Attorney First—and Make Sure You Have a Good One!
- Notify Your Professional Liability Carrier
- Who Is Your Attorney's Client?
- Is the Complaint Valid?
- Did You Make a Formal Complaint More Likely?
- Apologize and Accept Responsibility?
- What Are You Willing to Have Done?
- Recognize How the Complaint Is Affecting You
- Get the Help and Support You Need
- What Can the Ordeal Teach?
- Chapter 17: Steps in Ethical Decision Making
- Step 1: State the Question, Dilemma, or Concern as Clearly as Possible
- Step 2: *Anticipate Who Will Be Affected by the Decision
- Step 3: Figure Out Who, If Anyone, Is the Client
- Step 4: Assess Whether Our Areas of Competence—and of Missing Knowledge, Skills, Experience, or Expertise—Fit the Situation
- Step 5: Review Relevant Formal Ethical Standards
- Step 6: Review Relevant Legal Standards
- Step 7: Review the Relevant Research and Theory
- Step 8: *Consider Whether Personal Feelings, Biases, or Self-Interest Might Shade Our Ethical Judgment
- Step 9: Consider Whether Social, Cultural, Religious, or Similar Factors Affect the Situation and the Search for the Best Response
- Step 10: Consider Consultation
- Step 11: *Develop Alternative Courses of Action
- Step 12: *Think Through the Alternative Courses of Action
- Step 13: Try to Adopt the Perspective of Each Person Who Will Be Affected
- Step 14: *Decide What to Do, Review or Reconsider It, and Take Action
- Step 15: *Document the Process and Assess the Results
- Step 16: *Assume Personal Responsibility for the Consequences
- Step 17: *Consider Implications for Preparation, Planning, and Prevention
- Chapter 18: Beginnings and Endings, Absence and Access
- Accessibility for People With Disabilities
- Clarification
- Therapist Availability Between Sessions
- Vacations and Other Anticipated Absences
- Serious Illness and Other Unanticipated Absences
- Steps for Making Help Available in a Crisis
- Endings
- Conclusion
- Chapter 19: Informed Consent and Informed Refusal
- Process of Informed Consent
- The Foundation of Informed Consent
- Adequate Information
- Considerations in Providing Informed Consent
- Failing to Provide Informed Consent
- Benefits of Informed Consent
- Limits of Consent
- Consent for Families and Other Multiple Clients
- Unequal Opportunity for Informed Consent
- Cognitive Processes
- Problems With Forms
- Additional Resources
- Chapter 20: Assessment, Testing, and Diagnosis
- Awareness of Standards and Guidelines
- Staying Within Areas of Competence
- Making Sure That Our Tests and Assessment Methods Stay Within Their Areas of Competence
- Understanding Measurement, Validation, and Research
- Ensuring That Patients Understand and Consent to Testing
- Clarifying Access to the Test Report and Raw Data
- Following Standard Procedures for Administering Tests
- Knowing the Literature on Recordings and Third-Party Observers
- Awareness of Basic Assumptions
- Awareness of Personal Factors Leading to Misusing Diagnosis
- Awareness of Financial Factors Leading to Misusing Diagnosis
- Acknowledging Low Base Rates
- Acknowledging Dual High Base Rates
- Avoiding Confusion Between Retrospective and Predictive Accuracy
- Awareness of Forensic Issues
- High-Stakes Testing
- Attention to Potential Medical Causes
- Critically Examining Prior Records and History
- Clearly State All Reservations About Reliability and Validity
- Providing Adequate Feedback
- Chapter 21: Sexual Attraction to Patients, Therapist Vulnerabilities, and Sexual Relationships With Patients
- How Modern Ethics Codes Address Therapist–Client Sex
- How Therapist–Client Sex Can Injure Clients
- Gender and Other Patterns of Perpetrators and Victims
- Common Scenarios of Therapist–Client Sex
- Therapist Risk Factors
- Why Do Therapists Refrain When They Are Tempted?
- Confronting Daily Issues
- Physical Contact With Clients
- Sexual Attraction to Clients
- When the Therapist Is Unsure What to Do
- Working With Clients Who Have Been Sexually Involved With a Therapist
- Ethical Aspects of Rehabilitation
- Hiring, Screening, and Supervising
- Chapter 22: Nonsexual Multiple Relationships and Other Boundary Crossings: The Therapeutic, the Harmful, the Risky, and the Inevitable
- How the Field Changed Its View of Boundary Issues
- What Makes This Area So Hard for Us?
- Research Leading to a Call for Changes in the Ethics Code
- Multiple Relationships as Defined by the APA and CPA Ethics Codes
- Three Interesting Examples of Multiple Relationships
- Research Review
- Self-Disclosure
- Bartering
- Multiple Relationships and Boundary Issues in Small Communities
- Seven Common Therapist Errors and Mending Fences
- Sources of Guidance
- Additional Resources
- Chapter 23: Culture, Context, and Individual Differences
- Context, Competence, and Personal Responsibility
- Bringing It All Back Home
- Context of Oppression, Exclusion, Discrimination, and Inequity
- Overcoming Barriers to Ethical Services
- Chapter 24: Confidentiality
- Referral Sources
- Public Consultation
- Gossip
- Case Notes and Patient Files
- Phones, Faxes, and Messages
- Home Office
- Sharing With Loved Ones
- Communications in Group or Family Therapy
- Written Consent
- Managed Care Organizations
- Disclosing Confidential Information for Mandated Reports Only to the Extent Required by Law
- Publishing Case Studies
- Distraction
- Focusing on Legal Responsibilities to the Exclusion of Ethical Responsibilities
- Chapter 25: Recognizing, Assessing, and Responding to Suicidal Risk
- Special Considerations
- Avoiding Pitfalls: Advice From Experts
- Chapter 26: Steps to Strengthen Ethics in Organizations: Research Findings, Ethics Placebos, and What Works
- Keep Codes in Context
- Respect the True Costs of Betraying Ethics
- Encourage Speaking Up, Listening Carefully, and Acting With Fairness
- Conclusion: Only If We Act
- Chapter 27: Supervision
- Clear Tasks, Roles, and Responsibilities
- Competence
- Assessment and Evaluation
- Informed Consent
- Sexual Issues
- Supervisee Perceptions of Supervisor's Unethical Behavior
- Beginnings and Endings, Absence and Availability
- Introduction to Appendices
- Appendix A: The Hoffman Report and the American Psychological Association: Meeting the Challenge of Change
- What Does the Hoffman Report Have to Do With Each of Us as an Individual APA Leader, Member, or Outsider?
- What Could Each of Us Have Done Differently?
- What Do We Want Our Ethics and Our Ethics Enforcement to Be?
- What Do We Do to Discover or Screen Out What Happens?
- Where Do We Go From Here?
- Appendix B: The Hoffman Report: Resetting APA's Moral Compass
- Lessons Learned
- Conclusion
- References
- About the Authors
- Ken Pope
- Melba J. T. Vasquez
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- End User License Agreement
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