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Online Course Title: Retired ~ Ethics VIII, Part C, Rehabilitation
  Category: 7
  Credits: 1
 
 
  Objectives: • Gain an understanding from a person who committed boundary violations of how one can, under the right—or wrong circumstances—make devastating errors. • Understand the difference between ethical issues, legal concerns, and boundary violations. • Become aware of how ethics and licensing panels work. • Be able to recognize categories of offenders and varying approaches to their rehabilitation.
  Description: In the partner program to this one, Ethics 7, “Sexual Misconduct,” we explored the psychological and psychodynamic underpinnings of therapists who commit these severe boundary violations. Now in this program, we will take a look at the repercussions. There is a tendency to want to distance ourselves from the “bad apples” that have sexual contact with clients, and to view them as the most marginal members of the profession. But unilaterally separating out those who have had a romantic or sexual involvement with a client as uniquely dangerous, untreatable, and never worthy of return to the field flies in the face of the history of our own professions. It bears repeating that the ramifications to a therapist accused of sexual misconduct with a patient range from the catastrophic to the cataclysmic. But there is an additional option. Since the beginning of the fields of psychotherapy and counseling, counselors and therapists have been treating colleagues for problems that could impact on their work with clients. And now various rehabilitation options have been developed and are sometimes offered to offenders, not instead of punishment but in addition. While there are a number of differences in rehabilitation models, each involves an assessment. Each model recognizes that some offenders lie or minimize, that some offenders cannot be rehabilitated, and each presumes that public safety is the main issue. The research is inconclusive as to the success of rehabilitation, but we owe it to ourselves and our professions to learn as much as we can.
    Approval Bodies:
  • Professional Development
  • Florida Dept. of Health (Board of Social Work, Marriage & Family, Mental Health Counseling)
  • NAADAC, National Association for Addiction Professionals
  • National Board for Certified Counselors
  • Florida Board of Nursing
  • Association of Social Work Boards Approved Continuing Education (ACE)
  • California Consortium of Addiction Programs and Professionals (CCAPP)
  • CAADE - California Association for Alcohol/Drug Educators
  • Connecticut Certification Board, Inc.
  • Pennsylvania Certification Board
  • Florida Board of Psychology
  • California Board of Registered Nursing
  • California Association of DUI Treatment Programs (CADTP)