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NRNP 6645 MIDTERM REVIEW Study Guide, NRNP 6645 - Psychotherapy With Multiple Modalities, Walden University. R232,24   Add to cart

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NRNP 6645 MIDTERM REVIEW Study Guide, NRNP 6645 - Psychotherapy With Multiple Modalities, Walden University.

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NRNP 6645 MIDTERM REVIEW Study Guide, NRNP 6645 - Psychotherapy With Multiple Modalities, Walden University.

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  • January 9, 2024
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NRNP 6645 - Midterm study guide

Legal and ethical considerations among individual, family, and
group modalities of therapy

, NRNP 6645 - Midterm study guide

Legal and ethical considerations among individual, family, and group modalities of therapy

Domestic violence & sexual abuse:
• Most states require professionals to report any suspicion of child abuse.

• Although reporting suspected abuse can jeopardize a therapeutic alliance, sometimes
therapy needs to take a second place to the interests of safety.

• If a clinician does not report suspected child abuse, they should consider the
consequences of making a mistake.

• Perpetrators and victims of childhood sexual abuse don’t usually volunteer
this information.

• Detection of this abuse is up to the therapist who may have to rely on indirect clues

• A child MAY show the following symptoms if they are being abused: sleep disturbance,
encopresis or enuresis, abdominal pain, exaggerated startle response, appetite
disturbance, sudden unexplained changes in behavior, overly sexualized behavior,
regressive behavior, suicidal thoughts or running away.

Ethical Dimension:
• Therapy should be for the client’s benefit, not to work out unresolved issues for
the therapist

• Clients are entitled to confidentiality, but limits of privacy must be imposed in regards
to probation officers, parents, and managed care companies

• Therapists should avoid exploiting the trust of their clients (and students) and must avoid
dual relationships

• Professional are obligated to provide the best possible treatment, if they are not qualified,
they should refer the patient to someone else who is.

• When in doubt regarding ethical issues, its best practice to consult with a colleague or
supervisor.

• Psychologists offer services only within the areas of their competence, based on
education, training, supervision or professional experience.

• When psychologists become aware of personal problems that might interfere with their
professional duties, they take appropriate measures, such as obtaining professional
assistance and determining whether they should limit, suspend or terminate their work-
related duties.

,• Social workers should not engage in dual relationships with clients or former clients.

• Social workers should not solicit private information from clients unless it is essential
to providing services

• Social workers should not disclose confidential information to third party payers unless
clients have authorized such disclosure.

• Social workers should terminate services to clients when such services are no longer
required.

• Counselors are not allowed to maintain a relationship with current clients through
social media
• Counselors must wait 5 years after the last clinical contact to have sexual or romantic
relationship with a former client or family member of a client. This applies to both in-
person and electronic interactions.

• The APA specifies that when a psychologist provides serves to several people in a
relationship (spouse or parents and children), they must clarify at the start which
individuals are clients and what relationship he or she will have with each one.

• Additionally, if the psychologist is called on to perform potentially conflicting roles
(such as family therapist and witness for one party in divorce proceedings), he or she
must attempt to clarify and change or withdraw from the roles as appropriate.

• The NASW states that when a social worker provides services to a co ule or family
members, he/she should clarify with all parties what professional obligations he or she
has to the various individuals receiving services.

• Also, the social worker should ask all parties to agree to each individual’s right
to confidentiality.

• As a therapist one way to resolve ambiguous ethical dilemmas is to use your own best
judgement.

• When in doubt, clinicians should ask themselves two questions:
1) What would happen if the client or or important others found out about my
actions?
2) Can you talk to someone you respect about what you’re doing
(or considering)?

• The following are “red flags” which should signal potential unethical practices:
1) Specialness - believing that something about the situation is special and that
the ordinary rules don’t apply.

, 2) Attraction - feeling intense attraction of any kind not only romantic but also
being impressed with the status of the client.
3) Alteration in the therapeutic frame - having longer or more frequent sessions,
engaging in excessive self-disclosure, being unable to say no to the client, and
other things that signal a potential violation of professional boundaries
4) Violating client norms - not referring someone in a trouble marriage for
couples therapy, accepting personal counseling from a supervisor and so on.
5) Professional isolation - not being willing to discuss your decision with
professional colleagues.


COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY
o “A collaborative process of empirical investigation, reality testing, and problem
solving between the therapist and the patient.”
o The basic premise is that depression is the result of cognitive distortions, and
these distortions are learned errors in thinking (Beck)
o CBT is “a system of psychotherapy based on a theory which maintains that how an
individual structures his or her experiences largely determines how he or she feels
or behaves.”
o Dysfunctional thoughts relating to self, world, and/or others are rooted in irrational
or illogical assumptions. The individuals view of self and the world is central to the
determination of emotions and behaviors and thus by changing one’s thoughts,
emotions, and behaviors can also be changed.
o Primary and secondary thinking. Secondary thinking views the social and cultural world
in determinate, positive, rational terms. Primary thinking recognizes the
indeterminate, negative, and irrational as a part of human action forever.
o Clinical strategies are used to help the individual recognize the dysfunctional nature
of their thinking patterns and to help the individual change their conclusions.
o Cognitive therapy advocates guided discovery rather than directly challenging the
patient’s views. Allowing the patient to find the answers to their problems as much
as possible.

Socratic Dialogue
o “Mutual discovery in which the therapist guides the patient through a series of
questions and answers to elicit automatic assumptions and examine the logic
and evidence that relates to them.”
o Involves the therapist asking specific questions derived primarily from restatement of
the individual’s own words as the major technique leading the individual to self-
discover

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