ACA Ethical Standards Casebook

Höfundur Barbara Herlihy

Útgefandi Wiley Professional Development (P&T)

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781556203213

Útgáfa 7

Útgáfuár 2015

8.390 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Table of Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Authors
  • About the Contributors
  • Making the Best Use of the Casebook
  • Part I: Introduction
  • Evolution of the ACA Ethical Standards and the Casebook
  • The 2014 ACA Code of Ethics Revision Process
  • Major Changes in the 2014 ACA Code of Ethics
  • A Personal Reflection
  • Foundations of Codes of Ethics
  • Developing a Personal Ethical Stance
  • The Ethical Decision-Making Process
  • A Review of Ethical Decision-Making Models
  • Specialized Models
  • Similarities Among Models
  • Elements of Ethical Decision Making
  • Enforcement of the ACA Code of Ethics
  • Dealing With Complaints
  • What to Do If a Complaint Is Filed Against You
  • An Inventory of Your Attitudes and Beliefs About Ethical Issues
  • Part II: ACA Code of Ethics With Illustrative Vignettes
  • Section A: The Counseling Relationship
  • Introduction
  • A.1. Client Welfare
  • A.1.a. Primary Responsibility
  • A.1.b. Records and Documentation
  • A.1.c. Counseling Plans
  • A.1.d. Support Network Involvement
  • A.2. Informed Consent in the Counseling Relationship
  • A.2.a. Informed Consent
  • A.2.b. Types of Information Needed
  • A.2.c. Developmental and Cultural Sensitivity
  • A.2.d. Inability to Give Consent
  • A.2.e. Mandated Clients
  • A.3. Clients Served by Others
  • A.4. Avoiding Harm and Imposing Values
  • A.4.a. Avoiding Harm
  • A.4.b. Personal Values
  • A.5. Prohibited Noncounseling Roles and Relationships
  • A.5.a. Sexual and/or Romantic Relationships Prohibited
  • A.5.b. Previous Sexual and/or Romantic Relationships
  • A.5.c. Sexual and/or Romantic Relationships With Former Clients
  • A.5.d. Friends or Family Members
  • A.5.e. Personal Virtual Relationships With Current Clients
  • A.6. Managing and Maintaining Boundaries and Professional Relationships
  • A.6.a. Previous Relationships
  • A.6.b. Extending Counseling Boundaries
  • A.6.c. Documenting Boundary Extensions
  • A.6.d. Role Changes in the Professional Relationship
  • A.6.e. Nonprofessional Interactions or Relationships (Other Than Sexual or Romantic Interactions or
  • A.7. Roles and Relationships at Individual, Group, Institutional, and Societal Levels
  • A.7.a. Advocacy
  • A.7.b. Confidentiality and Advocacy
  • A.8. Multiple Clients
  • A.9. Group Work
  • A.9.a. Screening
  • A.9.b. Protecting Clients
  • A.10. Fees and Business Practices
  • A.10.a. Self-Referral
  • A.10.b. Unacceptable Business Practices
  • A.10.c. Establishing Fees
  • A.10.d. Nonpayment of Fees
  • A.10.e. Bartering
  • A.10.f. Receiving Gifts
  • A.11. Termination and Referral
  • A.11.a. Competence Within Termination and Referral
  • A.11.b. Values Within Termination and Referral
  • A.11.c. Appropriate Termination
  • A.11.d. Appropriate Transfer of Services
  • A.12. Abandonment and Client Neglect
  • Section B: Confidentiality and Privacy
  • Introduction
  • B.1. Respecting Client Rights
  • B.1.a. Multicultural/Diversity Considerations
  • B.1.b. Respect for Privacy
  • B.1.c. Respect for Confidentiality
  • B.1.d. Explanation of Limitations
  • B.2. Exceptions
  • B.2.a. Serious and Foreseeable Harm and Legal Requirements
  • B.2.b. Confidentiality Regarding End-of-Life Decisions
  • B.2.c. Contagious, Life-Threatening Diseases
  • B.2.d. Court-Ordered Disclosure
  • B.2.e. Minimal Disclosure
  • B.3. Information Shared With Others
  • B.3.a. Subordinates
  • B.3.b. Interdisciplinary Teams
  • B.3.c. Confidential Settings
  • B.3.d. Third-Party Payers
  • B.3.e. Transmitting Confidential Information
  • B.3.f. Deceased Clients
  • B.4. Groups and Families
  • B.4.a. Group Work
  • B.4.b. Couples and Family Counseling
  • B.5. Clients Lacking Capacity to Give Informed Consent
  • B.5.a. Responsibility to Clients
  • B.5.b. Responsibility to Parents and Legal Guardians
  • B.5.c. Release of Confidential Information
  • B.6. Records and Documentation
  • B.6.a. Creating and Maintaining Records and Documentation
  • B.6.b. Confidentiality of Records and Documentation
  • B.6.c. Permission to Record
  • B.6.d. Permission to Observe
  • B.6.e. Client Access
  • B.6.f. Assistance With Records
  • B.6.g. Disclosure or Transfer
  • B.6.h. Storage and Disposal After Termination
  • B.6.i. Reasonable Precautions
  • B.7. Case Consultation
  • B.7.a. Respect for Privacy
  • B.7.b. Disclosure of Confidential Information
  • Section C: Professional Responsibility
  • Introduction
  • C.1. Knowledge of and Compliance With Standards
  • C.2. Professional Competence
  • C.2.a. Boundaries of Competence
  • C.2.b. New Specialty Areas of Practice
  • C.2.c. Qualified for Employment
  • C.2.d. Monitor Effectiveness
  • C.2.e. Consultations on Ethical Obligations
  • C.2.f. Continuing Education
  • C.2.g. Impairment
  • C.2.h. Counselor Incapacitation, Death, Retirement, or Termination of Practice
  • C.3. Advertising and Soliciting Clients
  • C.3.a. Accurate Advertising
  • C.3.b. Testimonials
  • C.3.c. Statements by Others
  • C.3.d. Recruiting Through Employment
  • C.3.e. Products and Training Advertisements
  • C.3.f. Promoting to Those Served
  • C.4. Professional Qualifications
  • C.4.a. Accurate Representation
  • C.4.b. Credentials
  • C.4.c. Educational Degrees
  • C.4.d. Implying Doctoral-Level Competence
  • C.4.e. Accreditation Status
  • C.4.f. Professional Membership
  • C.5. Nondiscrimination
  • C.6. Public Responsibility
  • C.6.a. Sexual Harassment
  • C.6.b. Reports to Third Parties
  • C.6.c. Media Presentations
  • C.6.d. Exploitation of Others
  • C.6.e. Contributing to the Public Good (Pro Bono Publico)
  • C.7. Treatment Modalities
  • C.7.a. Scientific Basis for Treatment
  • C.7.b. Development and Innovation
  • C.7.c. Harmful Practices
  • C.8. Responsibility to Other Professionals
  • C.8.a. Personal Public Statements
  • Section D: Relationships With Other Professionals
  • Introduction
  • D.1. Relationships With Colleagues, Employers, and Employees
  • D.1.a. Different Approaches
  • D.1.b. Forming Relationships
  • D.1.c. Interdisciplinary Teamwork
  • D.1.d. Establishing Professional and Ethical Obligations
  • D.1.e. Confidentiality
  • D.1.f. Personnel Selection and Assignment
  • D.1.g. Employer Policies
  • D.1.h. Negative Conditions
  • D.1.i. Protection From Punitive Action
  • D.2. Provision of Consultation Services
  • D.2.a. Consultant Competency
  • D.2.b. Informed Consent in Formal Consultation
  • Section E: Evaluation, Assessment, and Interpretation
  • Introduction
  • E.1. General
  • E.1.a. Assessment
  • E.1.b. Client Welfare
  • E.2. Competence to Use and Interpret Assessment Instruments
  • E.2.a. Limits of Competence
  • E.2.b. Appropriate Use
  • E.2.c. Decisions Based on Results
  • E.3. Informed Consent in Assessment
  • E.3.a. Explanation to Clients
  • E.3.b. Recipients of Results
  • E.4. Release of Data to Qualified Personnel
  • E.5. Diagnosis of Mental Disorders
  • E.5.a. Proper Diagnosis
  • E.5.b. Cultural Sensitivity
  • E.5.c. Historical and Social Prejudices in the Diagnosis of Pathology
  • E.5.d. Refraining From Diagnosis
  • E.6. Instrument Selection
  • E.6.a. Appropriateness of Instruments
  • E.6.b. Referral Information
  • E.7. Conditions of Assessment Administration
  • E.7.a. Administration Conditions
  • E.7.b. Provision of Favorable Conditions
  • E.7.c. Technological Administration
  • E.7.d. Unsupervised Assessments
  • E.8. Multicultural Issues/Diversity in Assessment
  • E.9. Scoring and Interpretation of Assessments
  • E.9.a. Reporting
  • E.9.b. Instruments With Insufficient Empirical Data
  • E.9.c. Assessment Services
  • E.10. Assessment Security
  • E.11. Obsolete Assessments and Outdated Results
  • E.12. Assessment Construction
  • E.13. Forensic Evaluation: Evaluation for Legal Proceedings
  • E.13.a. Primary Obligations
  • E.13.b. Consent for Evaluation
  • E.13.c. Client Evaluation Prohibited
  • E.13.d. Avoid Potentially Harmful Relationships
  • Section F: Supervision, Training, and Teaching
  • Introduction
  • F.1. Counselor Supervision and Client Welfare
  • F.1.a. Client Welfare
  • F.1.b. Counselor Credentials
  • F.1.c. Informed Consent and Client Rights
  • F.2. Counselor Supervision Competence
  • F.2.a. Supervisor Preparation
  • F.2.b. Multicultural Issues/Diversity in Supervision
  • F.2.c. Online Supervision
  • F.3. Supervisory Relationship
  • F.3.a. Extending Conventional Supervisory Relationships
  • F.3.b. Sexual Relationships
  • F.3.c. Sexual Harassment
  • F.3.d. Friends or Family Members
  • F.4. Supervisor Responsibilities
  • F.4.a. Informed Consent for Supervision
  • F.4.b. Emergencies and Absences
  • F.4.c. Standards for Supervisees
  • F.4.d. Termination of the Supervisory Relationship
  • F.5. Student and Supervisee Responsibilities
  • F.5.a. Ethical Responsibilities
  • F.5.b. Impairment
  • F.5.c. Professional Disclosure
  • F.6. Counseling Supervision Evaluation, Remediation, and Endorsement
  • F.6.a. Evaluation
  • F.6.b. Gatekeeping and Remediation
  • F.6.c. Counseling for Supervisees
  • F.6.d. Endorsements
  • F.7. Responsibilities of Counselor Educators
  • F.7.a. Counselor Educators
  • F.7.b. Counselor Educator Competence
  • F.7.c. Infusing Multicultural Issues/Diversity
  • F.7.d. Integration of Study and Practice
  • F.7.e. Teaching Ethics
  • F.7.f. Use of Case Examples
  • F.7.g. Student-to-Student Supervision and Instruction
  • F.7.h. Innovative Theories and Techniques
  • F.7.i. Field Placements
  • F.8. Student Welfare
  • F.8.a. Program Information and Orientation
  • F.8.b. Student Career Advising
  • F.8.c. Self-Growth Experiences
  • F.8.d. Addressing Personal Concerns
  • F.9. Evaluation and Remediation
  • F.9.a. Evaluation of Students
  • F.9.b. Limitations
  • F.9.c. Counseling for Students
  • F.10. Roles and Relationships Between Counselor Educators and Students
  • F.10.a. Sexual or Romantic Relationships
  • F.10.b. Sexual Harassment
  • F.10.c. Relationships With Former Students
  • F.10.d. Nonacademic Relationships
  • F.10.e. Counseling Services
  • F.10.f. Extending Educator–Student Boundaries
  • F.11. Multicultural/Diversity Competence in Counselor Education and Training Programs
  • F.11.a. Faculty Diversity
  • F.11.b. Student Diversity
  • F.11.c. Multicultural/Diversity Competence
  • Section G: Research and Publication
  • Introduction
  • G.1. Research Responsibilities
  • G.1.a. Conducting Research
  • G.1.b. Confidentiality in Research
  • G.1.c. Independent Researchers
  • G.1.d. Deviation From Standard Practice
  • G.1.e. Precautions to Avoid Injury
  • G.1.f. Principal Researcher Responsibility
  • G.2. Rights of Research Participants
  • G.2.a. Informed Consent in Research
  • G.2.b. Student/Supervisee Participation
  • G.2.c. Client Participation
  • G.2.d. Confidentiality of Information
  • G.2.e. Persons Not Capable of Giving Informed Consent
  • G.2.f. Commitments to Participants
  • G.2.g. Explanations After Data Collection
  • G.2.h. Informing Sponsors
  • G.2.i. Research Records Custodian
  • G.3. Managing and Maintaining Boundaries
  • G.3.a. Extending Researcher–Participant Boundaries
  • G.3.b. Relationships With Research Participants
  • G.3.c. Sexual Harassment and Research Participants
  • G.4. Reporting Results
  • G.4.a. Accurate Results
  • G.4.b. Obligation to Report Unfavorable Results
  • G.4.c. Reporting Errors
  • G.4.d. Identity of Participants
  • G.4.e. Replication Studies
  • G.5. Publications and Presentations
  • G.5.a. Use of Case Examples
  • G.5.b. Plagiarism
  • G.5.c. Acknowledging Previous Work
  • G.5.d. Contributors
  • G.5.e. Agreement of Contributors
  • G.5.f. Student Research
  • G.5.g. Duplicate Submissions
  • G.5.h. Professional Review
  • Section H: Distance Counseling, Technology, and Social Media
  • Introduction
  • H.1. Knowledge and Legal Considerations
  • H.1.a. Knowledge and Competency
  • H.1.b. Laws and Statutes
  • H.2. Informed Consent and Security
  • H.2.a. Informed Consent and Disclosure
  • H.2.b. Confidentiality Maintained by the Counselor
  • H.2.c. Acknowledgment of Limitations
  • H.2.d. Security
  • H.3. Client Verification
  • H.4. Distance Counseling Relationship
  • H.4.a. Benefits and Limitations
  • H.4.b. Professional Boundaries in Distance Counseling
  • H.4.c. Technology-Assisted Services
  • H.4.d. Effectiveness of Services
  • H.4.e. Access
  • H.4.f. Communication Differences in Electronic Media
  • H.5. Records and Web Maintenance
  • H.5.a. Records
  • H.5.b. Client Rights
  • H.5.c. Electronic Links
  • H.5.d. Multicultural and Disability Considerations
  • H.6. Social Media
  • H.6.a. Virtual Professional Presence
  • H.6.b. Social Media as Part of Informed Consent
  • H.6.c. Client Virtual Presence
  • H.6.d. Use of Public Social Media
  • Section I: Resolving Ethical Issues
  • Introduction
  • I.1. Standards and the Law
  • I.1.a. Knowledge
  • I.1.b. Ethical Decision Making
  • I.1.c. Conflicts Between Ethics and Laws
  • I.2. Suspected Violations
  • I.2.a. Informal Resolution
  • I.2.b. Reporting Ethical Violations
  • I.2.c. Consultation
  • I.2.d. Organizational Conflicts
  • I.2.e. Unwarranted Complaints
  • I.2.f. Unfair Discrimination Against Complainants and Respondents
  • I.3. Cooperation With Ethics Committees
  • Part III: Issues and Case Studies
  • Chapter 1: Client Rights and Informed Consent
  • Case Study 1: Keep Kendra’s Secret, or Not?
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 2: A Minor (?) Client
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Reflection
  • Chapter 2: Social Justice and Counseling Across Cultures
  • Case Study 3: She’s Done This Before
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 4: Working With an Immigrant Family
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 3: Confidentiality
  • Case Study 5: The Slap—How to Best Help Hope
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 6: A Supervisee Feels Betrayed
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 4: Competence
  • Case Study 7: I Feel Exhausted
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 8: Couples Counseling Gone Wrong
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 5: Managing Value Conflicts
  • Case Study 9: I’m Stuck
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 10: A Parental Dilemma: Hastening the Death of a Child
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 6: Counseling Minor Clients
  • Case Study 11: A Legal Guardian Presses for Confidential Information
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 12: A Pregnant Teenager: A School Counselor’s Quandary
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 7: Managing Boundaries
  • Case Study 13: Disputing Unhealthy Beliefs or Imposing Values?
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 14: If You Will Excuse Me
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 8: Working With Clients Who May Harm Themselves
  • Case Study 15: Suicide or a Well-Reasoned End-of-Life Decision?
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 16: A Suicidal Teenager
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 9: Technology, Social Media, and Online Counseling
  • Case Study 17: Making Social Media Decisions for an Agency
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 18: A Client’s Friend Request
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 10: Supervision and Counselor Education
  • Case Study 19: Poor Supervision or Impaired Student?
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 20: An Imposition of Values?
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 11: Research and Publication
  • Case Study 21: Expert Review of a Research Study
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 22: A Question of Authorship
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Chapter 12: The Intersection of Ethics and Law
  • Case Study 23: A Student Commits Suicide
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Case Study 24: Good Intentions Go Awry
  • Questions for Thought and Discussion
  • Analysis
  • Questions for Further Refl ection
  • Highlights of Ethical Practice
  • References
  • Index
  • Technical Support
  • End User License Agreement
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