Weighing Patient’s Rights against Psychologist’s Rights

Ethics & Risk Management: Expert Tips VQ: I have a question about the use of e-mails with clients but it may be relevant to larger issues in the therapeutic relationship. Are we allowed to refuse to do certain things that a client requests or must we do everything they want? My usual practice is to let clients know that I communicate by telephone and by voice mail messages; that I don’t communicate by e-mail. The father of a child I am treating is in the middle of a legal separation process and he wants me to “confirm” everything in e-mails the day after each session with my client. He is being very pushy with me and I feel like he’s actually bullying me about this. I know we focus a lot on clients’ rights, but what are my rights (and obligations) in this situation?

A: This is an excellent question that raises a number of important issues that many psychologists may be confronted with over time. A major focus of our profession is the welfare of the consumer of our professional services. The APA Ethics Code (APA, 2002) makes it clear in its General Principles that we seek to help others and minimize the risks of harm, that we fulfill our agreements and act with integrity, that we provide fair and equitable treatment of all and that we act with respect for individual differences.

Specific Ethical Standards address avoiding harm, conflicts of interest and exploitative relationships. Thus, a major emphasis of our profession’s ethics code is on providing high quality professional services that are in the recipient’s best interests, taking clear steps to minimize the risk of exploitation or harm.

But, the situation you describe is less than clear cut. The issue of who your client is must be thoughtfully addressed. Assuming that your client is a minor and could not consent to his or her own treatment, it is likely that the parent is the actual “client,” that is, the one who has provided consent. Since this is a separation/divorce situation this further complicates matters.

Based on what you have said, it appears that thus far there has been no change in the parents’ legal status or rights so they each should be able to consent independently to their child’s treatment and you wouldn’t need consent from both parents. But in these situations it is always best to clarify each individual’s legal status to confirm who has the legal right to consent to a minor child’s treatment.

This situation and your obligations may be viewed under ethical standards 3.10, Informed Consent; 10.01, Informed Consent to Therapy; and 3.07, Third-Party Requests for Services (APA, 2002). All expectations and obligations should be reviewed and clarified from the outset of the professional relationship. For example, Standard 3.07 specifies that:

“When psychologists agree to provide services to a person or entity at the request of a third party, psychologists attempt to clarify at the outset of the service the nature of the relationship with all individuals or organizations involved. This clarification includes the role of the psychologist (e.g., therapist, consultant, diagnostician or expert witness), an identification of who is the client, the probable uses of the services provided or the information obtained and the fact that there may be limits to confidentiality.” (p. 1065)

While it is important to clarify who the client is, the more basic underlying issue in these situations is to determine and reach an agreement on to whom you owe an obligation and what obligations you owe each individual (Barnett, Behnke, Rosenthal and Koocher, 2007; Fisher, 2009). All this should be discussed and agreed to in the informed consent process at the outset of the professional relationship and revised or updated if substantive changes occur over the course of time that may necessitate this.

What appears to be not so subtly implied in your question is the father’s possible motivations for pressuring you to “put everything in writing.” The use of e-mails as a means of communication can provide him with “proof” or evidence of what has transpired in treatment and could possibly provide him with ammunition for his legal battle. Such issues speak to the difficulties psychologists and other mental health professionals experience when the clinical and legal realms intersect or overlap (Zimmerman et al., 2009).

One issue of great importance to address in the informed consent process is just what your role will be. It is essential to clarify that you will be providing the child with psychotherapy and that you are not conducting a forensic evaluation to be used in legal proceedings. Since the e-mail communications you describe can easily be misused and at a minimum, used out of context, your desire to avoid e-mail communications makes great sense.

Further, exercising your judgment on the appropriateness of composing and sending these e-mails seems very appropriate in keeping with the need to consider your obligations to each party involved.

By Jeffrey E. Barnett, PsyD, ABPP

Excerpt from Ethics & Risk Management: Expert Tips V, a 2-hour online course that addresses a variety of ethics and risk management topics in the form of 14 archived articles from The National Psychologist. Topics include: (1) Is it kosher for a psychotherapist to serve as an expert witness? (2) Weighing patient’s rights against psychologist’s rights (3) Techno breaches could cost practitioners big bucks (4) Custody cases require special training (5) Too many rules – Risk Management (6) Pay me now, pay me later (7) Business of Practice and Ethics (8) Not all nations share APA’s ethics standards (9) Student/professor dating always questionable (10) Therapists need a strong back-up plan (11) Ethics primer addresses core issues (12) Wintering south can create ethics problems (13) Confidentiality in the 21st Century – Risk Management (14) The fiduciary heart of ethics. This course is intended for psychotherapists of all specialties.

Preventing Medical Errors in Behavioral Health – 2013 Update

Preventing Medical Errors in Behavioral Health

By: Leo Christie, PhD; Catherine Christie, PhD; Susan Mitchell, PhD

CE Credit: 2 Hours

Target Audience: Florida-licensed Psychologists, Counselors, Social Workers & MFTs

Learning Level: Intermediate

Course Type: Online
Preventing Medical Errors in Behavioral HealthThis course is intended to increase clinicians’ awareness of the types of errors that can occur within mental health practice, how such errors damage clients, and numerous ways they can be prevented. Its emphasis is on areas within mental health practice that carry the potential for “medical” errors. Examples include improper diagnosis, breach of confidentiality, failure to maintain accurate clinical records, failure to comply with mandatory abuse reporting laws, inadequate assessment of potential for violence, and the failure to detect medical conditions presenting as psychiatric disorders (or vice-versa). It includes detailed plans for error reduction and prevention like root cause analysis, habitual attention to patient safety, and ethical and legal guidelines. The course includes numerous case illustrations to help demonstrate common and not-so-common behavioral health errors and specific practices that can help clinicians become proactive in preventing them. There is a new section on preventing medical errors in the use of technology. *This course satisfies the medical errors requirement for license renewal of Florida mental health professionals. Course #20-70 | 2013 | 31 pages | 15 posttest questions
Professional Development Resources is approved as a provider of continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB #1046); the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC#5590); the American Psychological Association (APA); the National Association of Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC #000279); the Commission on Dietetic Registration (CDR #PR001); the Continuing Education Board of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA #AAUM); the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA #3159); and various state licensing boards.
Related articles
Enhanced by Zemanta

Florida Social Work, MFT & Mental Health Counselor License Renewal Info

Florida-CEUsALL CSW/MFT/MHC licensees and registered intern licenses will expire on March 31, 2013. You may renew your license online beginning January 2013.

30 hours of approved continuing education (CE) are required to renew, including:

  • Two (2) hour course relating to prevention of medical errors
  • Three (3) hour course in ethics and boundary issues
  • Two (2) hours of CE on domestic violence must be completed every third biennial licensure renewal period. These two (2) hours shall be part of the 30 hours otherwise required for each biennial licensure renewal, and may be taken at anytime during the six years preceding the renewal for the biennial in which the credit is due.


Professional Development Resources
is approved as a provider of continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB #1046); the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC #5590); the American Psychological Association (APA); the National Association of Alcoholism & Drug Abuse Counselors (NAADAC #000279); the Florida Board of Clinical Social Work, Marriage & Family Therapy, and Mental Health Counseling (#BAP346) and is CE Broker compliant (all courses are reported to CE Broker within one week of completion).

Florida-licensed social workers, MFTs and mental health counselors can earn all 30 hours required for renewal through online courses offered @ https://www.pdresources.org/.

Anyone licensed in Florida for the first time on November 1, 2010 or after are exempt from obtaining renewal continuing education for the current biennium ending March 31, 2013.

Information obtained from the Florida Board of Clinical Social Work, Marriage & Family Therapy and Mental Health Counseling website on 12/12/2012: http://www.doh.state.fl.us/mqa/491/

Solving ‘Under’ and ‘Over’ Diagnosis in Drugged Children

Solving ‘Under’ and ‘Over’ Diagnosis in Drugged ChildrenThe number of children/adolescents diagnosed with neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders has risen dramatically since the mid-1990s. This has been in tandem with the increased use of psychotropic medications, often multiple agents (“drug cocktails”) as the mainstay of intervention.

Research supports both the “underdiagnosis” and “overdiagnosis” of mental health disorders in children/adolescents, with the exception of the good evidence-based support for medication management in cases of primary attention deficit disorder, which are not associated with significant co-morbidity.

One thing is certain – most children/adolescents with one or more mental health diagnoses who are treated, frequently for extended periods with various “drug cocktails,” are not receiving intensive diagnostic evaluations.

More specifically, “drive-by” assessments in primary care and mental health settings have become an acceptable standard of care while comprehensive psychological/neuropsychological testing and psychoeducational evaluation are clearly the exception.

There are several reasons for the significant underutilization of detailed psycho-diagnostic testing. First, many parents and other consumers of mental health care as well as health care professionals and specialists, regrettably including far too many child psychiatrists, have limited knowledge regarding psychometric assessment.

A second factor is the steadily worsening “pass the buck” phenomena in special education and behavioral health care. Public schools are overwhelmed with the number of students referred for evaluation and most special education departments do not have the staffing or expertise to perform proper assessments in many cases.

Additionally, syndromes such as ADD, which are arguably better conceptualized as psychoeducational conditions than medical illnesses, continue to fall under the purview of medical professionals for diagnosis and treatment, which limits the assessment role played by school departments.

Third, managed care plans remain reluctant to approve authorization for testing conducted by community-based psychologists employed in clinics, hospitals and private practice. Authorization for evaluation of neurodevelopmental conditions – learning disorders and ADD are routinely denied.

When authorizations are approved, the time and payment allotted for the evaluation are typically so limited that psychologists are often given the draconian choice of providing an inadequate and ethically dubious assessment or declining to take the case. Pediatricians, other primary care physicians and medical specialists – notably psychiatrists and neurologists – involved in the assessment and treatment of childhood mental health disorders, have done little to advocate for more adequate authorizations from insurance companies for psychodiagnostic testing.

A collaborative cost-sharing model involving parents, special education departments and community-based clinicians can lead to the timely completion of comprehensive clinical evaluations.

Special education departments could agree to provide assessment within traditional areas of expertise – intelligence and academic skills evaluation, parent and teacher rating scale assessment, socio-emotional testing, speech/language, occupational therapy and physical therapy evaluations.

Community-based psychologists would complete any needed additional evaluation. This could involve administration of neuropsychological tests and, as needed, more in-depth socio-emotional assessment and an evaluation of family functioning.

Fees for record reviews and attendance at psychoeducational planning meetings would be paid to the psychologist by the school department, the family or cost-shared between the two parties.

This model is most clearly indicated for children/adolescents with complicated clinical histories and behavioral symptoms associated with impaired school achievement/functioning. Many of these cases fall within the pervasive developmental disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, major affective/mood and/or psychotic spectrums.

For a subset of these children, there may be additional questions about risk of self-harm and/or harm to others. These types of cases pose significant challenges for parents and school staff in terms of the completion of an affordable in-depth assessment.

Special education departments, parents and community-based psychologists are strongly encouraged to forge stronger alliances around the issue of how to make top-notch clinical assessments readily available and affordable for children and their families. The medical community is encouraged to step up advocacy and to become more familiar with use of psychometric assessment.

By Jerrold M. Pollak, PhD

Excerpt from Psychotherapy Practice Tips, Part 2

Professional Development Resources allows you the flexibility to earn CEU credits at your own pace and according to your own schedule, wherever you are. You can explore courses, register, study, take exams and earn your accredited continuing education units all online. And getting started earning CEUs is easy…

Vermont MFT Continuing Education and License Renewal Information

Online Continuing Education for Vermont MFTs.Vermont-licensed Marriage and Family Therapists (MFTs) have a biennial license renewal deadline on November 30th, even years. In order to renew a license, twenty (20) board approved continuing education hours are required. Ten (10) hours of continuing education are allowed from home study. Of the twenty hours, four (4) hours of ethics are required at each renewal. The board recognizes the National Board for Certified Counselors (NBCC) as a provider of Vermont MFT continuing education.

The main purpose of continuing education is to ensure the highest possible standards for the marriage and family therapist profession. All licensees are required to participate in continuing educational opportunities that will build upon existing competence and knowledge gained from from prior educational activities.

Professional Development Resources is approved by the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC) to offer home study continuing education for MFTs and NCCs (Provider #5590). We adhere to NBCC guidelines. Vermont MFTs can earn up to 10 hours of continuing education through online coursework @ https://www.pdresources.org/.

Continuing Education Requirements

Vermont MFTs are required as a condition of license renewal to complete a minimum of twenty (20) hours of continuing educational activities per biennial renewal period, even years.

Vermont Board of Allied Mental Health

Year-End Sales Event!

Year-End Sale

Our Year-End Continuing Education Sale has begun with 20% off select online CE courses for psychologists, counselors, social workers, SLPs, OTs, MFTs and RDs.

CE Sale

Sale ends 12/31/2012!

 

Change to CE Requirements for North Carolina MFTs

North Carolina MFTs can earn all 20 hours for renewal online!

Click to view online courses for MFTs

North Carolina-licensed Marriage and Family Therapists (MFTs) are required to obtain 20 hours of continuing education (CE) credits each year for license renewal on June 30th. 3 hours must be in the area of professional ethics. [The previous requirement was 12 hours per year and ethics was not required.]

CE courses that by title and content deal with marriage and family therapy practice and therapeutic issues, ethics and supervision of marriage and family therapy shall be approved by the Board.

Evidence of completion shall consist of a certificate of completion signed by the continuing education provider and shall include date(s) of attendance, number of hours, name of attendee, and name of course.

Professional Development Resources is approved as a provider of continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB Provider #1046, ACE Program); by the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC Provider #5590) and by the American Psychological Association (APA) to offer continuing education for MFTs. North Carolina MFTs can obtain all 20 hours for renewal through online home study courses offered @ http://www.pdresources.org/Courses/Marriage-and-Family/AllCourses/CourseID/1/

Renewal Information for Oregon Counselors & MFTs

Oregon-licensed professional counselors and marriage & family therapists (MFTs) must complete forty (40) clock hours of continuing education every 2 years. Six of those 40 hours must be in ethics training.

The reporting period is from the license renewal in one even-numbered year to the next license renewal in the subsequent even-numbered year. For example, if your birth month is June, your CEU reporting period would be from July 1, 2010 through June 30, 2012. You would report when you renew your license in June, 2012.

The 40 clock hours may be obtained in a variety of ways:

  • Attending college or university courses — 15 clock hours per semester credit or 10 clock hours per quarter credit.
  • Seminars, workshops, conferences and/or trainings.
  • Supervision (maximum of 10 hours)
  • Distance learning trainings must be offered or approved by a provider acceptable to the Board, e.g., NBCC. Distance learning programs must include mechanisms for evaluation, measurement, or confirmation of exchange of information.
  • Home study from approved providers must be offered or approved by a provider acceptable to the Board, e.g., NBCC.

 

Oregon Counselors and MFTs can earn all 40 hours through online courses

Click to view approved online courses

Professional Development Resources is approved as a provider of continuing education by the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC Provider #5590) and by the American Psychological Association (APA) to offer continuing education for Counselors and MFTs. Oregon licensees may obtain all 40 clock hours through online home study courses offered @ http://www.pdresources.org/Index.aspx.

In order to complete the continuing education requirements, education/training experiences must be in one or more of the following program areas:

  • Counseling or marital and family therapy theory and techniques
  • Human development and family studies
  • Social and cultural foundations
  • The helping relationship
  • Group dynamics
  • Lifestyle and career development
  • DSM diagnosis assessment
  • Research and evaluation
  • Professional orientation and ethics
  • Professional supervision training
  • Disability and life transitions
  • Substance abuse
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Diagnosis and treatment of mental health disorders

Courses in personal growth, computers, administration, management, marketing, or other business classes will NOT count.

Each reporting year, the Board randomly selects 10% of licensees for an audit to check compliance of its continuing education requirements.

The Oregon Board of Licensed Professional Counselors and Therapists: http://www.oblpct.state.or.us/

Renewal Information for Indiana Social Workers, Counselors & MFTs

Indiana counselors, social workers and MFTs can earn all 40 continuing education hours for renewal online

Click to view approved online courses!

Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, and Mental Health Counselors licensed in the State of Indiana are required to obtain at least forty (40) hours of continuing education in order to renew their license. 20 hours must come from Category I (formal) courses and 1 hour on ethics from a Category I course is required each year. The license renewal deadline is March 31, 2012.

Professional Development Resources is approved as a provider of continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB Provider #1046, ACE Program); by the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC Provider #5590) and by the American Psychological Association (APA) to offer continuing education for Social Workers, Counselors and MFTs. Indiana-licensees can earn all 40 hours per renewal through courses @ http://www.pdresources.org/Index.aspx (formal Category I).

Continuing Education Frequently Asked Questions

How many continuing education hours do I need to renew my license?

40 hours of continuing education credits are required for each renewal cycle or 20 CEUs per year.

What is the renewal cycle?

April 1st – March 31st of every even numbered year.

Are there any required courses I must take?

Yes, every licensee is required to take at least 1 hour of ethics in Category I continuing education each year.

How many hours of continuing education do I need if I have been licensed less than 24 months?

You will need 20 hours in order to renew your license.

How many hours of continuing education do I need if I have been licensed less than 12 months?

You do not need any continuing education in order to renew your license.

What are Category I CEUs and how many do I need per licensure cycle?

Category I is defined as continuing education that is formal programming, which includes the following:

  • Formally organized courses.
  • Workshops.
  • Seminars.
  • Symposia.
  • Institutes.
  • Home study programs, including computer; audio; video; and instructional programs, accredited by board-approved organizations.
  • Courses that are relevant to the license holder’s professional skills, which are part of the curriculum of an accredited university, college, or educational institution, shall earn fifteen (15) CEUs for each academic semester hour completed, or ten (10) CEUs for each academic quarter hour completed.
  • Faculty teaching a course for the first time at an accredited university, college, or educational institution shall earn one and one-half (1½) CEUs for every hour taught.

You are required to obtain a minimum of 20 Category I CEUs per renewal cycle.

What are Category II CEUs and how many do I need per licensure cycle?

Category II is defined as continuing education that is self-directed, which includes the following:

  • Journal clubs, earns one (1) CEU for each hour attended.
  • Office in-services, earns one (1) CEU for each hour attended.
  • Case conferences that are specifically designed for training or teaching, earns one (1) CEU for each hour attended.
  • Services as an instructor, presenter, or supervisor in a relevant professional seminar, workshop, or training conference earns one (1) CEU for each hour of service, but only for the initial instruction, presentation, or supervision given.
  • Research and publication of research results in a recognized professional journal or book form, earns ten (10) CEUs, but may only be claimed for the initial publication of the information.
  • Providing peer review of another licensee’s therapy and skills, which includes consultation, conference, and critique, earns one (1) CEU for each hour spent with the peer for this purpose.
  • Services on boards and commissions and holding office in professional organizations, specifically related to the licensee’s profession, earns one (1) CEU for each hour of service

You are not required to earn any Category II hours however, if you do use Category II hours towards you CEU requirement then you may acquire no more than 20 Category II CEUs per renewal cycle.

How do I document Category II hours?

You can record your hours on a Word document or spreadsheet. You should include the date of the activity, the type of activity, and the amount of time you spent conducting the activity.

How many hours in Category II hours can I count?

You can count up to 10 Category II hours per year and a maximum of 20 per renewal cycle.

Can I take all of my CEUs in one year or do they have to be split evenly throughout the renewal period?

You can take as many CEUs as you like as long as you take at least 20 CEUs per year, a minimum of 10 of those hours must be Category I.

Can continuing education credits transfer from one renewal period to the next?

No. Credits can only be counted for the period in which they are taken.

Do copies of my completed continuing education certificates need to be sent to the licensure board when I renew my license?

No. Certificates are for your records and will only need to be submitted if you are audited. However, it is required that licensees maintain copies of their CEU records for a period of four years in the event they are audited by the Board.

What do I do if I am audited?

Once you receive your audit letter you will need to either fax or mail in copies of continuing education certificates to the Board by the deadline stated on the letter.

What happens if I didn’t receive the necessary CEUs during a licensure cycle or can’t produce the necessary documents during an audit?

You will be required to make up the continuing education hours you are short and you will have to pay a fine. The Board has adopted the proposed schedule as a general guideline for continuing education violations:

Behavioral Health and Human Services Licensing Board: http://www.in.gov/pla/social.htm

Change to Online Hours Allowed for Georgia Counselors, Social Workers & MFTs

The Georgia Composite Board of Professional Counselors, Social Workers and Marriage and Family Therapists voted August 5, 2011 to adopt amendments to their rule regarding Continuing Education requirements. The primary change involved the number of online CE’s the Board will accept:

Change to Online Hours Allowed for Georgia Counselors, Social Workers & MFTs135-9-.01 Requirements. Amended
(4) A maximum of ten (10) hours of continuing education may be obtained online for each two-year renewal period. This rule change became effective on August 30, 2011

The Board also adopted on a policy during their August 5, 2011 Board meeting to accept all approved online CE hours obtained by a licensee between July 1, 2010 (NOT PREVIOUSLY USED TO SATISFY THE 2010 RENEWAL PERIOD) and September 30, 2011 for the upcoming September 2012 Renewal. This will apply ONLY for the 2012 renewal.

Simply put, this means:

  • Any CE Hours you have obtained between July 1, 2010 and September 30, 2011, if they meet the Board’s CE Hours provider requirements, will be accepted for the renewal of your license in 2012, even if all 35 CE Hours were online or a combination, just as in past years.
  • If you have not yet obtained any CE Hours for the 2012 renewal before September 30, 2011, then this new rule change applies to you: Only 10 CE Hours will be accepted from online (approved) sources.

Professional Development Resources is approved as a provider of continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB Provider #1046, ACE Program); by the National Board of Certified Counselors (NBCC Provider #5590) and by the American Psychological Association (APA) to offer continuing education for Georgia Counselors, Social Workers and Marriage & Family Therapists (MFTs).