PsychiatricTimes Members: Login | Register

|     

PsychiatricTimes SearchMedica Medline Drugs

Powered by SearchMedica

 
Risk Assessment
News
Current Issues
Blogs
Special Reports
CME
Conferences
Resources
Careers
Multimedia
About Us
 

Home »

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 25 No. 4
Pages: 1  2  
Next
 

Prevention of Boundary Violations

The Role of Education, Self-Monitoring, and Consultation

By Glen O. Gabbard, MD | April 1, 2008
Dr Gabbard is Brown Foundation Chair of Psychoanalysis and professor of psychiatry at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. He reports no conflicts of interest concerning the subject matter of this article.

Prevention of professional boundary violations in psychotherapy is a matter of crucial importance for the mental health field. Patients are damaged by boundary violations. Psychotherapists' careers are ended. Families of therapists and patients alike are devastated. And last but not least, the reputation of mental health professionals, and psychotherapy in particular, is damaged in a way that takes a great deal of effort to repair. Cinematic and television depictions of psychotherapy cannot resist showing therapists as weak-willed individuals who cavalierly disregard professional ethics to gratify their own needs.1

Despite the clarion call to monitor boundaries that the mental health professions, the licensing boards, and the ethics committees have sent out to all clinicians, the professional violations that have caused so much distress for so many continue. Prevention is far more complicated than one might think. While there are, of course, a variety of measures that can be taken, none of them is foolproof. Psychotherapy requires a radical form of privacy that is essential for the development of trust in the therapeutic relationship. Patients must feel that they can pour their hearts out to their therapists without having to worry that there will be an adverse impact on any other sphere of their lives. Hence, the therapeutic frame (ie, 2 people talking intimately behind a closed door) ensures that the mental health professions will never be able to monitor what transpires between therapist and patient in anything approaching a fail-safe manner. Boundary violations will occur no matter how hard we try to prevent them. The best we can hope for is to reduce their frequency and severity.

Everyone agrees that a fundamental ethical premise of the psychotherapeutic setting is that the patient's needs must be placed before the therapist's needs. Unfortunately, this distinction can become elusive in many situations where the therapist develops desire for the patient. In such situations, the therapist begins to rationalize that certain unorthodox behaviors will ultimately be in the patient's best interest. If the patient was deprived of loving parents, the therapist may argue that he or she must become like a parent and love the patient better than the parents could. From this point of view, deciding to provide treatment for free, to visit the patient outside scheduled hours, and to provide hugs and other forms of physical contact to prove one's caring and affection for the patient can be justified as "re-parenting." Psycho- therapists, like all human beings, are masters of self-deception. We can all convince ourselves that what appears to be in our best interest to any outside observer is actually in the patient's best interest. In spite of these limitations, a number of preventive approaches may have a significant effect on the profession.

Education
Education occurs in a variety of settings. Didactic seminars in psychiatric residency, clinical psychology graduate schools, and social work pro- grams can teach fundamental ethics. Supervision is helpful in operationalizing these ethical principles into a form of technique. After psychotherapists are in practice, continuing education occurs in workshops, lectures, through supervision/mentoring, and study groups. Education of the public may also be useful in preventing boundary violations.

In didactic seminars, the reasons for professional boundaries must be made explicit to students in the mental health professions. Such concepts as transference, countertransference, the power differential in fiduciary relationships, and the notion that sex can be exploitative even when a patient says it is "consensual" must be part of every future psychotherapist's education. Boundaries and ethics cannot be taught as a list of rules. They must be embedded in the teaching of good clinical technique. Students must learn that they will always encounter feelings of various kinds in the treatment of patients, and that they must find ways of working with such feelings rather than disavowing them or acting them out.

Another aspect of education must be practical instruction in how one should manage a treatment impasse.2 Educators must emphasize again and again that isolation is perhaps the greatest risk in the therapist's career. A culture of seeking consultation and supervision must be ingrained in trainees so that they do not attempt to be the "Lone Ranger" when confronted with difficult clinical situations. Students must be taught that there is nothing inherently noble in figuring out solutions to clinical problems on one's own. Trainees should learn the warning signs that signal a higher than usual potential for boundary violation. Much of this can be packaged in terms of the "slippery slope" concept.3 Most egregious boundary violations are preceded by subtle breaks in the therapeutic frame that progress over time, such as extending the session or hugging the patient. Catching one's first missteps through a rigorous self-monitoring process can help avoid progressing down the slope.

Education of the public should be another goal of the mental health professions. In books and articles written for the lay public, we must stress that sexual relations between a patient and therapist are never acceptable, and that there are many nonsexual boundary violations that can be equally harmful, such as financial transactions with patients that are outside the payment of the fee for service. Some psychotherapists place written materials in their waiting rooms so that all patients are apprised of the professional boundaries inherent in ther- apy and can be alerted to behavior that seems at odds with community standards.

Education of psychotherapists will go only so far as a prophylactic measure, however. The truly unscrupulous individual with antisocial traits or severe narcissistic personality disorder with superego lacunae may be completely impervious to education. Such therapists may smugly believe that they know what is best and do not need to follow the guidelines of the profession. Even ethical and well-trained psychotherapists will encounter certain patients who, in some way, touch a nerve deep within them that results in a steady and gradual increase in rationalizing unethical behavior. Hence, the bottom line of all educational efforts must be to teach psychotherapists to make consultation a regular part of their practice. In this sense, therapists need not wait until they are in a difficult situation to avail themselves of a supervisory or consultation process as a safety net in their regularly scheduled activities.

Consultation
Intrinsic in the value of consultation is that therapists can never see themselves fully from their own internal perspective. A consultant has an outside point of view that is capable of observing behaviors and nonverbal communications that are missed by the therapist's own self-scrutiny. Countertransference blind spots may be more apparent to a consultant, especially one who has been involved over a period with a particular consultee, so that alterations in the therapist's usual way of working are more easily identified.

Sexual boundary violations have often been referred to as forms of professional incest. This model has heuristic value because incest involves 2 parties who have a secret relationship outside the conscious awareness of a third party. The introduction of a consultant into the therapeutic dyad shatters the forbidden incest-like quality of the psychother- apeutic setting and ensures that there is a third party observing the process.4 Indeed, the therapist "carries" the consultant into the session as an internal presence with whom the therapist can undertake an internal dialogue.

Pages: 1  2  
Next
 

Join the Conversation

Want to join the conversation? If you're a healthcare professional, we'd like to hear your comments. Just sign in or register today to become part of our growing, online community.






 
TOPIC INDEX

Addiction Medicine
Alzheimer Disease
Anxiety Disorders
ADHD
Bipolar Disorder
Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Dementia
Depression
DSM-5
Geriatric Psychiatry

 

Health Care Reform
Major Depressive
Disorder
OCD
Personality Disorders
Schizoaffective Disorder
Schizophrenia
Sleep Disorders
Somatoform Disorders
All Topics

 


 
FROM PHYSICIANS PRACTICE
Five Steps to Improving Patient Access
Judy Capko,  May 21, 2013
Patient access is getting increased attention through reform initiatives. Here are five steps you can take to make sure patients get appropriate access to care in your office.
Growing HIPAA Threat – Ignore Windows XP at Your Own Peril
Marion K. Jenkins,  May 21, 2013
Chances are good that you have some major ticking software time bombs lurking in your medical practice's computer environment, namely Windows XP and Server 2003.
Finding Physician Work-Life Balance in the Small Moments
Jennifer Frank, MD,  May 21, 2013
At my practice and at home, things are always busy. There's laundry or homework, or a patient with needs.
Three Areas to Reduce Costs at Your Medical Practice
Greg Mertz,  May 19, 2013
By taking a hard look at reducing costs for staffing, overhead, and technology at your medical practice, you may see increased physician compensation.
Dos and Don’ts for Starting a Physician Blog
Michael Woo-Ming, MD,  May 18, 2013
Starting a physician blog can provide your medical practice with marketing benefits, but it's important to do it right.
 

 

 
MOST POPULAR
  • Most Popular
  • Most Emailed
  • Most Recent
  • Developmental Psychopathology Comes of Age
  • The Moral Struggles of Practicing Psychiatrists
  • Grief and Depression: The Sages Knew the Difference
  • Update on Mental Health Benefits and Substance Use Disorder Services Under the Affordable Care Act
  • Synthetic Cathinones: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment
  • Grief and Depression: The Sages Knew the Difference
  • Successful Aging: Strategies to Help Maintain and Nurture a Healthy Brain
  • Synthetic Cathinones: Signs, Symptoms, and Treatment
  • Developmental Psychopathology Comes of Age
  • Psychiatry and the Myth of “Medicalization”
  • The Role of Biological Tests in Psychiatric Diagnosis
  • You Are—And Your Mood Is—What You Eat
  • Experts Discuss Changes, Updates in DSM-5
  • The Paradox of Choice: When More Medications Mean Less Treatment
  • Will Your Clinical Records Support You in Court?
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter
 
COMMENTS
  • Most Commented
  • Most Recent
  • Grief and Depression: The Sages Knew the Difference
  • Psychiatry and the Myth of “Medicalization”
  • Is it Time for a Treatment Manual to Complement DSM-5?
  • NIMH vs DSM 5: No One Wins, Patients Lose
  • DSM-5 Won’t Solve the Overdiagnosis Problem—But Clinicians Can
  • DSM-5 Won’t Solve the Overdiagnosis Problem—But Clinicians Can
  • The Paradox of Choice: When More Medications Mean Less Treatment
  • Experts Discuss Changes, Updates in DSM-5
  • New Insight Into the Neurobiology of Depression
  • Tie One On for Patients
Click here to subscribe to our newsletter
 
CAREER CENTER

  •   Featured Jobs  
  •    Resources   
  • Psychiatry and Nurse Practitioner Opportunities
  • Associate Medical Director - Psychiatrist Delray Beach, Florida
  • Retiring Child Psychiatrist Seeks Replacement August 2010 or Before
  • Chairperson, Dept of Psychiatry Needed
  • FT Staff Psychiatrist - Excellent Benefits
  • BC Adult and Child Psychiatrits - PT and FT Positions Available
  • Managing Risks When Practicing in Three-Party Care Settings
  • 12 Tips for Making Your Practice Greener
  • Keys to Avoiding Malpractice: Standard of Care in Psychiatric Practice
  • Take This Job and Shove It
  • Merging Administrative and Academic Careers in Psychiatry
 
SearchMedica SEARCH RESULT

Find peer-reviewed literature and websites for practicing medical professionals

CME on Display
Evidence on Display
Guidelines on Display
Patient Education on Display
Clinical Trials on Display
Practical Articles on Display
Research and Reviews on Display
All "Display" results

CancerNetwork | ConsultantLive | Diagnostic Imaging | Musculoskeletal Network | OBGYN.net | PediatricsConsultantLive |
Physicians Practice | Psychiatric Times | SearchMedica | Medical Resources

© 1996 - 2013 UBM Medica LLC, a UBM company
Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Advertising Information - Editorial Policy Statement - UBM Medica Network Privacy Policy