Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on The Importance Of Moral Principles In Professional Counseling. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The writer discusses beneficence, nonmalefience, confidentiality, veracity, autonomy, fidelity/faithfulness, justice and competency as they relate to moral principles in professional counseling. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCMrlCo.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
total faith in the hands of one who has not necessarily earned such a distinction. The pain these clients feel completely clouds their ability to discern between ethical procedure
and unscrupulous behavior; after all, it is not up to the troubled patient to determine whether or not she is being taken advantage of, since as a layperson she would
typically have no basis for such accusation. This is why the moral principle of beneficence is one of the most important of all. II. NONMALEFIENCE
A reasonable person would think that upholding the established ethics of professional counseling would be as commonplace as knowing that the sun will rise every morning
and set every night. It does not seem feasible that there are those within the industry who do not abide by the code of ethics while cloaked in their
counselor persona, regularly breaching confidentiality and compromising the patient/counselor relationship to ultimately cause undue harm. Indeed, the vast majority of those who seek counseling as a form of therapy
do so with the expectation that their counselors will follow concise ethical guidelines; when people open up and bare their innermost souls, the last thing they want to think about
is whether or not their therapist is going to take advantage of the situation. However, as with anything else in life, there are those who, although they may represent
a fraction of the entire workforce, find it quite difficult to adhere to professional ethics. These therapists negatively broad brush the entire counseling industry with their unscrupulous tactics, frightening
people away from a significantly beneficial source of therapy. "In medicine the concern for ethics has become central to the relationship between doctors and their patients" (Bowen, 1987, p.
...