This book describes and analyses the ethical dilemmas faced daily by psychotherapists. Drawing on extensive interviews with practitioners, the author identifies common themes and discusses them in the context of the different modalities - individual, group, marital and family, and organization therapies. Topics include judging ones appropriateness as a care provider for a particular patient, the intrusion of personal interests into therapy, confidentiality, and financial andinsurance arrangements. The author also considers common ethical problems arising from the underlying assumptions of the different therapies. This book affords an inside look at how psychotherapists define the basic ethical concerns of their profession and how they meet its ethical challenges. A finalchapter contains recommendations for the ethical practice of psychotherapy.
Ethical issues of everyday practice:: Interviews of psychotherapists about the ethical dilemnas they encounter; Ethics and negative effects of psychotherapies; Ideologies of psychotherapies:: Values of psychotherapies; Ethical challenges of individual psychotherapy; Ethical issues of group and dyadic therapies:: A comparative approach; The ethical minefield of marital and family therapies; Ethical issues in therapeutic interventions in organizations; Legal and ethical issues of thepsychotherapies; Where we are now:: Where we go from here; Index.
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