- Post starter
- #13
A
Awimob
An ethical counsellor or psychotherapist will have what is called a "supervisor". This is another experienced therapist who has (ideally) been trained in how to supervise other therapists. One of the main roles of the supervisor is to watch their supervisee's back.... to give the supervisee a place they can bring ethical dilemmas they are aware of (eg safeguarding) and also to raise the supervisee's awareness of potential ethical dilemmas the therapist may not be aware of. Another part of the supervisors job is to give an unbiased second opinion, and point out the therapists blind spots and areas for development.
This is why I mentioned being unethical now..... because if your therapist beached the therapeutic boundary in the past and their supervisor wasn't on the ball enough to head them off, then your friend may still be practising with either inadequate or non-existent supervision. This is unethical.
Any well trained therapist will know that to move from a therapeutic relationship to a friendship involving meeting outside the therapy arena is unethical and fraught with risk to the client. To ignore this indicates the therapist is using the client to meet an unmet need in themselves. This is exactly the kind of thing a competent supervisor will be looking out for.
If you are in a rural area then things have to be more fluid around dual relationships, which requires the therapist to be even more aware of ethical issues and the need for rock solid supervision.
This is why I mentioned being unethical now..... because if your therapist beached the therapeutic boundary in the past and their supervisor wasn't on the ball enough to head them off, then your friend may still be practising with either inadequate or non-existent supervision. This is unethical.
Any well trained therapist will know that to move from a therapeutic relationship to a friendship involving meeting outside the therapy arena is unethical and fraught with risk to the client. To ignore this indicates the therapist is using the client to meet an unmet need in themselves. This is exactly the kind of thing a competent supervisor will be looking out for.
If you are in a rural area then things have to be more fluid around dual relationships, which requires the therapist to be even more aware of ethical issues and the need for rock solid supervision.