Professional Ethics in Counselling Professor Craig Jackson Head of Psychology BCU Ethics Ethos - moral character or custom Morality comes from the Latin word “moralis” - custom or.

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Transcript Professional Ethics in Counselling Professor Craig Jackson Head of Psychology BCU Ethics Ethos - moral character or custom Morality comes from the Latin word “moralis” - custom or.

Professional
Ethics in
Counselling
Professor Craig Jackson
Head of Psychology
BCU
Ethics
Ethos - moral character or custom
Morality comes from the Latin word “moralis”
- custom or manner
Ethics is a generic term for various ways of understanding and
examining the moral life”
Beauchamp & Childress, 1994
Morality is concerned with perspectives of right and
proper conduct
Morality
There is nothing divine about morality
a purely human affair
If people are good only because they fear punishment, and
hope for reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed
What the individual can do is to give a fine example, and to
have the courage to uphold ethical values ... in a society of
cynics (Albert Einstein)
“People are responsible as the primary agents in determining
their own behaviour” (Evans 2001)
Consider your own Morality
Is your moral code the same as your parents’ or “significant
other”?
In what way has it changed since you left your family of origin?
On what basis do you decide what is right or wrong?
i.e. religion/legal grounds
How do you decide when to be honest or when it is wrong to
steal?; are these absolute values for you or are they always
relative to each particular situation?
Man does not strive to be good; the good is what it is human to
strive for (Perls et al, 1989, 335)
Bracket own values and morals and explore the
phenomenology of the client.
Your own Morality
10 personal qualities of the ethical therapist
Empathy - the ability to communicate understanding of another
person’s perspective
Sincerity – a personal commitment to consistency between
what is professed and what is done
Integrity – honesty and coherence
Resilience – the capacity to work with client’s concerns without
being personally diminished
Respect – showing appropriate esteem to others and their
understanding of themselves
10 personal qualities of the ethical therapist
Humility – the ability to assess accurately and acknowledge
one’s own strengths and weakness
Competence – the effective development of skills and
knowledge
Fairness – the consistent application of appropriate criteria to
inform decisions and actions
Wisdom - possession of sound judgement that informs practice
Courage – the capacity to act in spite of known fears, risks and
uncertainty
Values of Counselling & Psychotherapy
Respect for human rights and dignity
Ensuring the integrity of client practitioner relationships
Enhancing the quality of professional knowledge and its
application
Alleviating personal distress and suffering
Fostering a sense of self that is meaningful to the person’s
concerned
Values of Counselling & Psychotherapy
Increasing personal effectiveness
Enhancing the quality of relationships between people
Appreciating the variety of human experience and culture
Striving for fair and adequate provision of counselling and
psychotherapy services
Ethical Principles – Beuachamp & Childress 1994
1. Respect for individual autonomy – right of another to choose
and act in accordance with his or her wishes or beliefs
2. Beneficence – a commitment to benefiting the client
3. Non-maleficence – not to harm others intentionally
4. Justice – a fair distribution of services within society
Thompson (1990) added a further two principles
5. Fidelity – honouring the promises upon which the trust
between client and counsellor is founded
6.. Self-interest – the counsellor’s entitlement to all the preceding
principles (Bond, 2000)
Bond’s development of ethics
Ethical Problem Solving
6 stages
Methods taken from – Standards
and Ethics for counselling in
action (Bond, 1993)
Six step process
1. Produce a brief description of problem or dilemma
Can have effects of clarifying, reducing even
removing the difficulty.
2. Whose dilemma is it anyway?
Ethical Problem Solving
3. Consider all ethical principles and guidelines
Questions to be considered
What actions are prohibited by law
What actions are required to be performed by law
What are the people involved, including yourself, entitled
by law
In the absence of any relevant guidelines or decisive legal
advise you can consider
Non malificence – what will cause least harm
Respect for autonomy – what maximises the
opportunities for everyone involved to implement his or
her choices?
4. Identity all possible courses of action
Brainstorm possibilities
Ethical Problem Solving
5. Select the best of actions (Holly & Stradler 1986)
Universality – would my chosen course of action be
recommended to others? Would I condone this course of
action if t was done by someone else?
Publicity – could I explain my chosen course of action to
others would I be willing to have my actions and rationale
exposed to the scrutiny
Justice – Would I do the same for other clients in a similar
Situation. Would I do the same if the client were well known
and or influential?
If answers are No than reconsider your course of action.
Ethical Problem Solving
6. Evaluate the outcome
Learn from experiences
Was the outcome as you
hoped
Had you considered all
relevant factors with the
result?