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Ethical Issues in Counselling

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In no more than 3,000 words you are required to complete an essay on ethical issues in the practice of counseling, by addressing the following question: What are the two ethical issues which are likely to be the most concerning for you personally in your counseling work? Include a discussion of: 1. why each is important in your counseling work, or likely to be so; 2. what contribution recent journal articles make to discussion of these issues; 3. having read and considered the relevant literature on these issues, discuss how you are likely to deal with each of the two issues. Your essay should be written in the first person and should include a personal, reflective discussion, but should be scholarly and include a carefully …show more content…

In view of the continuum of multiple relationships, which ranges form boundary crossings that ‘may be harmful, helpful, or benign to the therapeutic process’ (Hermann, 2006, Moleski & Kiselica, 2005, Rosenbloom, 2003,) to boundary violations which ‘place clients, and the therapeutic process at a high risk’ ( Gutheil & Gabbard, 1993; Simon,1992), there seems to be something more than ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer to the non-sexual boundaries issue. Discussion on Boundary Crossing Giving gifts to my clients, joining them in social events, or disclosing something personal might sound unethical to many professional counsellors ( Ipsupovici & Luke , 2002). What if, the cases are giving a bookmark with encouragement to a stressful student about to sit for an open examination, unintended encounter with some clients in church services, and unintentional disclosure of my interest in dogs when my client was sharing her experience with pets? When put into context, it is usually more difficult for us to judge if a boundary crossing is unethical than by simply defining it or banning it. The above cases exemplify the unavoidable, ethical (e.g. Barnett & Yutrzenka, 1994; Borys & Pope, 1989; Herlihy & Corey,1997; Ebert, 1997; Younggren & Gottileb, 2004), or even helpful (Lazarus & Zur, 2002) nonsexual boundary crossing and

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