2 results for your search
Counselling, Confidentiality & the Law, Part Two
presented by Peter Jenkins; interview by Mike Simmons (Hereford, England: University of South Wales, Newport, 2012), 56 mins
Counselling and the law make uneasy bedfellows. Whilst counsellors often have no more than a vague idea of the ways in which the legal system might impact on their work, the legal profession itself is quite clear about what therapists should do if required to hand over their counselling notes, to appear in court a...
Sample
presented by Peter Jenkins; interview by Mike Simmons (Hereford, England: University of South Wales, Newport, 2012), 56 mins
Description
Counselling and the law make uneasy bedfellows. Whilst counsellors often have no more than a vague idea of the ways in which the legal system might impact on their work, the legal profession itself is quite clear about what therapists should do if required to hand over their counselling notes, to appear in court as a witness, or to describe their counselling work in detail.
For the counsellor this presents huge dilemmas, and many find themselve...
Counselling and the law make uneasy bedfellows. Whilst counsellors often have no more than a vague idea of the ways in which the legal system might impact on their work, the legal profession itself is quite clear about what therapists should do if required to hand over their counselling notes, to appear in court as a witness, or to describe their counselling work in detail.
For the counsellor this presents huge dilemmas, and many find themselves caught between a need to comply with the law and a fear of the impact that this will have on the client counsellor relationship. This programme differentiates the facts from the fantasies, and explores the issues involved when therapists find themselves under pressure to break confidentiality or, alternatively, when they themselves begin to wonder whether they should do so.
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Field of Study
Counseling & Therapy
Content Type
Interview
Author / Creator
Mike Simmons, Peter Jenkins
Date Published / Released
2012
Publisher
University of South Wales, Newport
Person Discussed
Peter Jenkins
Topic / Theme
Care providers, Client-therapist relationship, Counseling & Therapy, Confidentiality, Client-counselor relations, Legal issues, Professional ethics
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2012 University of Wales, Newport
×
Counselling, Confidentiality & the Law, Part One
presented by Peter Jenkins; interview by Mike Simmons (Herefordshire, England: University of South Wales, Newport, 2012), 1 hour 38 mins
Counselling and the law make uneasy bedfellows. Whilst counsellors often have no more than a vague idea of the ways in which the legal system might impact on their work, the legal profession itself is quite clear about what therapists should do if required to hand over their counselling notes, to appear in court a...
Sample
presented by Peter Jenkins; interview by Mike Simmons (Herefordshire, England: University of South Wales, Newport, 2012), 1 hour 38 mins
Description
Counselling and the law make uneasy bedfellows. Whilst counsellors often have no more than a vague idea of the ways in which the legal system might impact on their work, the legal profession itself is quite clear about what therapists should do if required to hand over their counselling notes, to appear in court as a witness, or to describe their counselling work in detail.
For the counsellor this presents huge dilemmas, and many find themselve...
Counselling and the law make uneasy bedfellows. Whilst counsellors often have no more than a vague idea of the ways in which the legal system might impact on their work, the legal profession itself is quite clear about what therapists should do if required to hand over their counselling notes, to appear in court as a witness, or to describe their counselling work in detail.
For the counsellor this presents huge dilemmas, and many find themselves caught between a need to comply with the law and a fear of the impact that this will have on the client counsellor relationship. This programme differentiates the facts from the fantasies, and explores the issues involved when therapists find themselves under pressure to break confidentiality or, alternatively, when they themselves begin to wonder whether they should do so.
Show more
Show less
Field of Study
Counseling & Therapy
Content Type
Interview
Author / Creator
Mike Simmons, Peter Jenkins
Date Published / Released
2012
Publisher
University of South Wales, Newport
Person Discussed
Peter Jenkins
Topic / Theme
Care providers, Education, development, and training, Counseling & Therapy, Client confidentiality, Professional ethics, Legal issues
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2012 University of Wales, Newport
×