Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counseling. Kenneth S. Pope
Читать онлайн книгу.when my new grad school therapy supervisor turned out to be nationally known and her recommendation to be key to the rest of my career, but she’s telling me to do things that are ethically shifty.
She’s sitting here in front of me, crying and telling me I’m her last hope because her husband beats her, but there are no shelter beds open and she can’t go to the police because her husband is a decorated police captain.
The physician down the hall is a quack, but as long as I refer my patients to him, he sends me enough referrals to pay my bills.
My immigrant client is struggling to obtain a green card (residence card), and has been waiting a much longer than average time period. I have contacts in the agency. Should I intervene to help facilitate the process? Is this an act of appropriate social justice?
A pregnant teenage client is considering having an abortion. She has not shared the news with her parents and wants me to keep her pregnancy a secret. She fears being kicked out of the house if her parents find out about her pregnancy.
Doing psychotherapy confronts us with constant challenges. Each ethical challenge, large or small, subtle or staring us in the face, brings a tangle of questions. Is there a “right” thing to do? If so, how do I find out what it is? How do I actually go about doing it? What makes it right? Who says so? If I do it, what will happen to the patient? to me? to innocent—and not-so-innocent—bystanders?
We wrestle with personal questions that are hard to admit to ourselves or others. What am I tempted to do? What could I get away with? Would doing the right thing cost too much? make people mad at me? get me sued? get me fired? Would doing the wrong thing be all that bad? Would anyone find out? What would happen to me if they did? What if I’m not strong enough, not “good” enough to do the right thing? Can I duck this one and stick someone else with it?
These stinging questions always lead back to the basic question: What do I do now?
Strong, deep, informed ethical awareness helps us answer that question. It brings into focus how our choices affect the lives of our patients, our colleagues, and the public. It frees us from the sticky webs of habit, fatigue, fallacy, dogma, carelessness, hurry, and stress. It wakes us to new possibilities.
If this book helps you to strengthen, deepen, and inform your ethical awareness, it will help you find better answers to that basic question: What do I do now? This book will disappoint those looking for an ethics cookbook, an authority pointing out the right answer for every scenario, a substitute for ethical consideration, decision-making, and personal responsibility. We believe that approach fails in the real world, leading us to blunder with confidence.
Each of us must bring our own ethical awareness to the challenges, pitfalls, and opportunities that we face in each unique, constantly changing situation, to make the best choices. We emphasize eight basic assumptions about ethical awareness.
1. Ethical awareness is a continuous and active process that involves constant questioning and personal responsibility.
Our work requires constant alertness and mindful awareness of the ethical implications of what we choose to do and not do. Ethical awareness helps us to shoulder personal responsibility for our ethical choices, for what we choose to do and not do. We face the consequences for what we choose or not choose to do.
Ethical awareness helps us avoid quick certainties that shut down further questioning. It prompts us to rethink what seems to be a “given,” to continuously look for more creative, more ethical, more effective solutions to problems.
Ethical awareness means setting aside arrogance and complacency. All of us have weaknesses, vulnerabilities, and blind spots—it comes with being human. The stark differences are not so much between those with many flaws and those with few but between those who are freely open to themselves and others about how their own shortcomings affect their work and those who tend to hide such shortcomings and see others as their inferiors.
Ethical awareness depends on our ability to take care of ourselves, to recognize when exhaustion, personal problems, or feelings like fear, anger, boredom, resentment, sadness, hopelessness, or anxiety hurt our work, and to do something about it.
2. Awareness of ethical codes is crucial, but formal codes cannot take the place of an active, thoughtful, creative approach to our ethical responsibilities.
Ethical awareness is strengthened and informed by pouring over the ethics codes that bear on our work. But formal standards and guidelines1 are no substitute for an active, deliberative, and creative approach to our ethical responsibilities. Codes prompt, guide, and inform our ethical considerations; they do not shut it down or take its place.
Ethical awareness never allows us to follow a code in a rote, thoughtless manner. Each new client, whatever their similarities to previous clients, is unique. Each situation is unique and constantly changing—time and events never stand still. Our theoretical orientation, our community and the client’s community, our race and culture and the client’s race, culture, and so many other contexts and factors shape what we see and how we make sense of what we see. Each ethical choice must take these complexities and contexts into account.
Codes can steer us away from clearly unethical approaches. They can shine a light on key values and concerns. But they cannot tell us what form these values and concerns will take. Standards and guidelines can set forth essential tasks or point to aspirational goals but they never show us the best way to carry out those tasks and realize those goals with a unique client facing unique problems in a specific time and place with limited resources. Ethical decision-making is a process and codes are only one part of that process.
3. Awareness of laws is crucial, but legal standards should not be confused with ethical responsibilities.
A risk in the emphasis on legal standards is that meeting legal standards, which for some can mean finding ways around those standards (e.g., looking for loopholes), can start to replace ethical behavior. This practice is a high art in the political arena. Caught betraying the public trust, politicians often insist they did nothing wrong because no law was broken. When it turns out that a law was broken, politicians admit that their enemies are harping on a mere “technical violation of the law.” Ethical awareness avoids the comfortable trap of aiming low, of striving only to get by without breaking any law.
Ethical awareness stays alert to possible conflicts between our ethical and our legal duties.
An overly exclusive focus on legal standards discourages ethical responsibility. Practicing “defensive therapy”—making risk management our main focus—can cause us to lose sight of our ethical responsibilities and the ethical consequences of what we say and do. When we originally discussed this tendency to confuse legal and ethical issues over 30 years ago in this book’s first edition, the tendency had already begun to spread widely. It shows no signs of slowing down.
4. We believe that the overwhelming majority of therapists and counselors are conscientious, dedicated, caring individuals, committed to ethical behavior. But none of us is infallible.
All of us can—and do—make mistakes, overlook something important, work from a limited perspective, reach conclusions that are wrong, hold tight to cherished beliefs that are misguided or biased. We’re aware of many barriers between us and our best work, but we may underestimate or overlook some of those barriers. Part of our responsibility is to question ourselves: What if I’m wrong about this? Is there something I’m overlooking? Could there be another way of understanding this situation? Are there other possibilities? Can I come up with a more creative, more effective, better way of responding?
5. Many of us find it easier to question the ethics of others than to question what we ourselves value, believe, and do. It is worth noticing if we often find ourselves stewing over just how ethically weak, dense, or shady others are while sparing ourselves from critical self-assessment.
It is a red flag if we spend more time trying to point out other people’s weaknesses, flaws,