Professional & Ethical Conduct Survey - HANDOUT

doc

School

Essex County College *

*We aren’t endorsed by this school

Course

MISC

Subject

Psychology

Date

Dec 6, 2023

Type

doc

Pages

2

Uploaded by Joann2424

Report
PROFESSIONAL / ETHICAL CONDUCT COUNSELOR/CLIENT RELATIONSHIPS SITUATIONAL SURVEY Please rate each of the following situations on a scale from "1" to "4” in terms of the counselor's professional conduct: 1 = Definitely non-professional 3 = Probably professional 2 = Probably non-professional 4= Definitely professional Also, for each of the following situations, which you rate, a "1" or "2", discuss how non-professional conduct might be converted into more ethically acceptable counselor behavior. 1. Counselor accepting complimentary concert tickets from his/her aftercare patient. 2. Counselor personally taking a resistant patient to his/her first AA meeting. 3. Counselor having coffee with a resistant patient after his/her first AA meeting. 4. Counselor going to bed with a resistant patient after having coffee following his/her first AA meeting. 5. Hiring one of your mechanically-inclined patients to overall the engine of your car. 6. Counselor selling fundraiser tickets to his patients in order to raise money for the agency he works for. 7. Accepting a free haircut from one of your aftercare clients who is currently attending barber training. 8. Accepting a free haircut from one of your aftercare patients who has never attended barber training. 9. Agreeing to baby sit for the children of one of your patients until she can complete treatment. 10. Taking one of your clients home with you for his/her first weekend pass so he/she has somewhere to go. 11. Attending the wedding of one of your aftercare patients. 12. Bringing doughnuts for all of the clients in your morning group. 13. Transporting a client in your personal car when other patients are leaving at the same time for the same destination in the program van. 14. Buying a wristwatch from one of your patients who owns a pawnshop. 15. Advising one of your patients not to take her/his prescription of Dilantin if she/he wants to remain drug free. 16. Informing your client's wife that her husband has tested HIV positive, because he refuses to tell her. 17. Dating one of your former clients the day after he/she completes treatment. 18. Waiting until after your "favorite" client finished aftercare before dating her/him. 19. Waiting until your "favorite" client has one year of sobriety before dating him/her. 20. Asking a celebrity client to help with P.R. for the agency as a means of getting others into TX 21. Soliciting a monetary donation from a recently graduated patient on behalf of your treatment agency. 22. Waiting six months before soliciting a monetary donation from a former patient on behalf of your agency. 23. "Bumming" a cigarette from one of your patients. 24. Allowing your patient to extend her state-subsidized treatment for an additional few weeks until she 1
receives her disability payment 25. Eating lunch with Bob, an aftercare client, whom you accidentally run into at Pizza Hut. 26. Shooting some eight ball with Bob, an aftercare patient, alter having had lunch together. 27. Dog sitting your client's doggie while client is in treatment. (Fido is very high strung and would probably have a nervous breakdown if placed in a kennel). 28. Taking your patient with you to your church on Sunday. 29. Loaning your patient five dollars for an I.D. Card. 30. Loaning another counselor's patient five dollars for an I.D. card. 31. Marrying a former patient alter he/she completes one year of sobriety 32. Housing a potential patient in your own home until a treatment bed becomes available. (only a few days). 33. Taking your patients sister to dinner in order to discuss her brother's progress in treatment. 34. Sharing your umbrella with a patient while walking from your car to the facility on a rainy day. 35. Having dinner with the parents of one of your adolescent patient. 36. Borrowing the truck of one of your patients in order to transport some new furniture to your home. 37. Asking some of your patients to help you move house. 38. Paying some of your patients to help you move house. 39. Taking one of your patients to the movies as a reward for his/her rapid progress in treatment. 40. Taking the children of your patient o the beach. 41. Agreeing to temporarily sponsor one of your patients until (s), he can find a permanent AA sponsor. 42. Agreeing to sponsor a patient from another program. 43. Bringing some old work clothes from home to give to one of your patients who needs work clothes to begin a new job. 2
Your preview ends here
Eager to read complete document? Join bartleby learn and gain access to the full version
  • Access to all documents
  • Unlimited textbook solutions
  • 24/7 expert homework help