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      A Re-Visioning of Boundaries in Professional Helping Relationships: Exploring Other Metaphors

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      Ethics & Behavior
      Informa UK Limited

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          This couldn't happen to me: boundary problems and sexual misconduct in the psychotherapy relationship.

          Drawing on their own consultative experience illustrated by case vignettes and with support from the professional literature, the authors discuss the perennial problematic issue of boundary violations and sexual misconduct, aiming at an audience of both experienced and novice clinicians. The authors review the difference between boundary crossings and boundary violations and stress the therapist's responsibility to maintain boundaries. Therapist risk factors for violations include the therapist's own life crises, a tendency to idealize a "special" patient or an inability to set limits, and denial about the possibility of boundary problems. Factors exacerbating patient vulnerability, such as overdependence on the therapist, seeking therapy to find an intense relationship or even "true love," and the acceptance by childhood abuse victims of an abusive therapy relationship, are discussed. Consultation and education-for students and for clinicians at all levels of experience-and effective supervision are reviewed as approaches to boundary problems.
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            How certain boundaries and ethics diminish therapeutic effectiveness.

            When taken too far, certain well-intentioned ethical guidelines can become transformed into artificial boundaries that serve as destructive prohibitions and thereby undermine clinical effectiveness. Rigid roles and strict codified rules of conduct between therapist and client can obstruct a clinician's artistry. Those anxious conformists who go entirely by the book, and who live in constant fear of malpractice suits, are unlikely to prove significantly helpful to a broad array of clients. It is my contention that one of the worst professional/ethical violations is to permit current risk-management principles to take precedence over humane interventions.
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              Therapeutic Relationships and Boundary Maintenance: The Perspective of Forensic Patients Enrolled in a Treatment Program for Violent Offenders

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ethics & Behavior
                Ethics & Behavior
                Informa UK Limited
                1050-8422
                1532-7019
                April 2006
                April 2006
                : 16
                : 2
                : 77-94
                Article
                10.1207/s15327019eb1602_1
                63b8d82c-9144-4e29-ad64-7f134a247e76
                © 2006
                History

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