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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page research paper that addresses 2 ethical issues for mental health care practice. Mental health counselors in the US follow the code of ethics layout by the American Mental Health Counselors Association (AMHCA). This comprehensive code covers numerous areas of ethical concern, two of which are the issues of obtaining informed consent and patient confidentiality. These are two areas that are integral to either counseling or research endeavors and therefore should be of prime consideration for practitioners. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_kh2etis.rtf
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ethical concern, two of which are the issues of obtaining informed consent and patient confidentiality. These are two areas that are integral to either counseling or research endeavors and therefore
should be of prime consideration for practitioners. Informed consent The code of ethics of the AMHCA states that "Mental health counselors are responsible for making their services readily accessible
to clients in a manner that facilitates the clients abilities to make an informed choice when selecting a provider" (Code of ethics, 2001, p. 2). This means that the client
should receive a comprehensive and clear description of all "tests, reports, billing, therapeutic regime and schedules, and the use of the mental health counselors statement of professional disclosure" (Code of
ethics, 2001, p. 2). However, even within the scope of the AMHCA code, the wording broaches the topic of problems in this area, as it also states that in the
event of the client being a minor, or someone who "possesses disabilities that would prohibit informed consent," then the counselor is simply advised to act in the "clients best interest"
(Code of ethics, 2001, p. 2). This leaves the topic open to a wide range of interpretations. A study conducted by Rew, Taylor-Seehafer and Thomas (2000) exemplifies this principle.
This research team selected homeless adolescents as the focus for their study. While, in general, the concept that informed parental consent, as well as the subjects consent, should be obtained
in regards to minors, the principle of beneficence comes into play when probable benefits from research are greater than associated risks (Rew, Taylor-Seehafer and Thomas, 2000). In other words, there
are instances, such as when there is evidence of parental abuse or neglect, where parental consent is contraindicated in regards to beneficence to the minor subject. Helweg-Larsen and
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