Training Title: Ethics II - Confidentiality Part A
Clock Hours: 1.5
Objectives: • Learn guidelines for handling secrets
• Identify ways to protect the client and the therapist
Description: The field of mental health and psychotherapy, no topic is the subject of as much concern and confusion as the topic of confidentiality. Does the therapist take the approach of risk management, dot all the i’s and cross all the t’s? Or does the therapist stick to moral convictions and early ingrained values about confidentiality? Do we protect the patient? Or do we protect ourselves? Is there a middle ground? Barbara Alexander, LCSW, BCD "Risk Management" reports on interviews with a number of very conservative attorneys, they discuss the Tarasoff case and record keeping, and the position that the therapist must always keep detailed records, including specific information about what the therapist did and said, and how it relates to the treatment plan. Christopher Bollas, MSW, "The Betrayal of Confidentiality" states that many clients will not come to therapy in out of fear that they will be turned over to the authorities, and unconsciously begin to edit the material they present to the therapist in the current reporting system. Therapists should not break confidentiality under any circumstance.
Approval Bodies
Association of Social Work Boards Approved Continuing Education (ACE)
CAADE - California Association for Alcohol/Drug Educators
California Association of DUI Treatment Programs (CADTP)
California Board of Registered Nursing
California Consortium of Addiction Programs and Professionals (CCAPP)
Connecticut Certification Board, Inc.
Florida Board of Nursing
Florida Board of Psychology
Florida Dept. of Health (Board of Social Work, Marriage & Family, Mental Health Counseling)
Illinois Alcohol & Other Drug Abuse Professional Certification Association, Inc. 2022-2024 -&- 2024-2026 (BE).
NAADAC, National Association for Addiction Professionals
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