Introduction, W. Brad Johnson & Gerald P. Koocher
In the Psychotherapist's Office
1. But It's a Really Nice Gift!: Ethical Challenges in Responding
to Offers of Gifts from Clients, Jeffrey E. Barnett
2. Everyone I Know Knows Everyone I Know: Boundary Overlap in the
Life of One Lesbian Psychotherapist, Laura S. Brown
3. Hitler Should Have Finished the Job: Counter Transference,
Anti-Semitism, Abandonment, and Termination, Michael A. Grodin
4. Suicidal Blackmail: Ethical and Risk Management Issues in
Contemporary Clinical Care, David Jobes
5. An Affair to Remember: Protecting Vulnerable Clients and
Confidentiality When Spouses Cheat, Mary Ann McCabe
6. Trapped by Trauma: When Clients Cannot or Will Not Protect
Themselves From Harm, John Peteet
7. To Warn or Not to Warn: That is the Question, David L.
Shapiro
8. What Would She Think?: Disclosure of Therapy Details After
Death, Dan Shapiro
9. It's My Right!: Working with a Terminally (or Chronically) Ill,
Persistently Suicidal Client, James L. Werth, Jr.
In the Forensic World
10. High Stakes Indeed: Forensic Psychology in Death Penalty
Litigation, Richart L. DeMier
11. Is that what I said?: Ethical Challenges When Parents Divorce
during Treatment, Robin M. Deutsch
12. Now you see it, now you don't: When Releases of Information are
Rescinded, John C. Gonsiorek
13. The Siren Song of Silence: Ensuring a Basis for Professional
Judgments, Robert Kinscherff
14. Thera-mail for a Quarter Century: Managing Complex Boundaries
with a Former Client, Frederic G. Reamer
15. Jonas and His Protective, Delusional, or Alienating Mother:
Advocacy, Forensics, and Boundaries with Battered Women, Lenore E.
Walker
In Medical Center Corridors
16. Determining a Patient's Capacity to Refuse Dialysis and Die:
When Professional Competence and Credentials Do Not Overlap, James
DuBois
17. When Boundaries Intersect in Cyberspace: Facebook, Multiple
Relationships, and Confidentiality in a Hospital, Nabil Hassan
El-Ghoroury
18. Second Chances: Decision Making in Pediatric Transplantation,
Lisa M. Farley
19. On being there: Boundaries in Emotionally Intense Contexts,
Gerald P. Koocher
In National Security Settings
20. I've Got This Friend: Multiple Roles, Informed Consent, and
Friendship in the Military, W. Brad Johnson
21. Establishing Rapport with an "Enemy Combatant": Cultural
Competency in Guantanamo Bay, Carrie H. Kennedy
22. Psychotic, Homicidal and Armed: The Delicate Balance Between
Personal Safety and Effectiveness in a Combat Environment, Heidi S.
Kraft
23. What Do You Know that Can Help Us? Behavioral Science in
National Security Settings, Susan E. Brandon
In Organizations
24. A Disaster in a Suite and Tie: When Organizational Policies
Undermine Ethical Obligations, Charles A. Morgan
25. Risking Your Job: On Striving to be An Ethical Leader in
Difficult Organizational Circumstances, Rodney L. Lowman
26. When Bad Things Happen to People Who Try Really Hard: Ethical
Quandaries in Test Validation, Nancy T. Tippins
In Schools and Colleges
27. When in Doubt, Pull Them Out? Ethical Issues Related to
Decisions on Child Removal from the Home, Lyvia Chriki
28. A Near Fall: The Multifaceted Challenges to Work in Sport
Psychology and Intercollegiate Athletics, Edward F. Etzel
29. Doing good versus avoiding harm: Resolving Situational
Contradictions, Alan Green
Supervising or Assisting Colleagues
30. The Wink: Ethical Aspects of Encountering Clients in Unexpected
Places, Stephen H. Behnke
31. Can you help us?: Supervising Graduate Students in a Crisis
Situation, Clark D. Campbell
32. Doing it by the Book: Ethical Issues in Teaching a Group
Didactically and Experientially. Gerald Corey
33. So, how exactly did you get interested in eating disorders?:
Confronting a Colleague's Unhealthy Behaviors, Jennifer L.
Derenne
34. Knocked Off Kilter: Supervising in the Wake of Sexual Boundary
Violations. Janet T. Thomas
In Religious Concerns and Settings
35. Of Course It's Confidential - Only the Community Knows: Mental
Health Services with the Old Order Amish, James A. Cates
36. Working Out One's Salvation in Fear and Trembling: Ethical and
Spiritual Dilemmas Around Therapeutic Boundaries, Andrew Michel
In the Public Arena
37. Ethics, The Constitution, Politics, Clinical Judgment and the
Case of Terri Schiavo, Brian Baird
38. Isn't this against the Law? Boundary problems in Police
Psychology, Gerald Sweet
W. Brad Johnson is Professor of Psychology at the United States
Naval Academy and Faculty Associate in the Graduate School of
Education at Johns Hopkins University. As a past chair of the
American Psychological Association's Ethics Committee and a former
Director of Research for George Fox University's Graduate School of
Clinical Psychology, Johnson is a leading authority on ethical
practice in clinical psychology, having authored many
publications
including 10 books in the area of mental health and counseling.
Gerald P. Koocher is Associate Provost and Professor of Psychology
at Simmons College and a Senior Lecturer at Harvard Medical School.
Having served as the President of the American Psychological
Association (APA) and as the Chief Psychologist at Children's
Hospital Boston, he has authored more than 200 articles and book
chapters and authored or edited 15 books, including the paramount
text in ethics and mental health, Ethics in Psychology and the
Mental Health Professions:
Professional Standards and Cases, now in its third edition.
"What an excellent, important compilation of many prickly, sticky,
complex ethical practice dilemmas! The multidisciplinary 'Who's
Who' of ethical experts have presented memorable cases of their
own, which contribute to a very compelling, highly readable set of
ethical predicaments in a wide variety of work settings, followed
by each author's personal reflections. This text is brilliant,
grounded in both principle ethics and virtue ethics, rooted in real
world
experiences. I love this book, and couldn't put it down!"--Melba
Vasquez, Ph.D., ABPP, President of the American Psychological
Association
"Widely-respected ethicists Johnson and Koocher have edited a
unique casebook that blows the dust off ethical abstractions and
brings them to life. It takes us inside the minds of mental health
professionals as they think their way through the conflicting
values, demands, and goals of actual ethical dilemmas. The authors
show us the diversity of ethical challenges we meet in our work and
the diverse ways of approaching them. A valuable contribution to
the
literature and a wonderful gift to both beginner and seasoned
professional."--Kenneth S. Pope, Ph.D., ABPP, co-author of Ethics
in Psychotherapy and Counseling: A Practical Guide, Fourth
Edition
"As rich in fundamental clinical wisdom as it is in ethics analyses
of professional dilemmas, this vital book is jam-packed with
courageous, self-revealing and riveting narratives from expert
clinicians about their adventures in that ethical twilight zone
called actual daily practice. The honesty and candor of the many
authors' voices make this a unique contribution to deep
understanding of decision making in the real world. Highest
recommendation."--Thomas G.
Gutheil, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
"Ethical Conundrums, Quandaries, and Predicaments in Mental Health
Practice: A
Casebook From the Files of Experts is a remarkably comprehensive,
often gripping firsthand account of mental health professionals
struggling with real ethical challenges. It represents a unique and
long-overdue resource for students and practitioners, primarily in
its illustrations of the phenomenology, the human experience, of
the ethical dilemma from the point of view of the clinician." --
Andrew M. Pomerantz, PsycCRITIQUES
"This is an excellent ethics guide for practicing mental health
professionals. The book is unique in its narrative format that not
only provides highly nuanced and useful cases, but makes for very
interesting reading." -- DOODY'S
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