With Due Consideration: Australian Human Service Practitioners' Understandings of Confidentiality and Disclosure Obligations in Regard to Cases Concerning Gambling-Related Theft

被引:1
作者
Patford, Janet [1 ]
Tranent, Peter [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Grad Sch Educ, Problem Gambling Res & Treatment Ctr, Carlton, Vic 3010, Australia
[2] Univ Tasmania, Sch Psychol, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia
关键词
Professional ethics; Ethical dilemmas; Confidentiality; Disclosure; Gambling-related theft; Problem gambling; ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING; SOCIAL-WORK; INFIDELITY SECRETS; PROCESS KNOWLEDGE; COUPLE THERAPY; EDUCATION; TARASOFF; CLIENT; CODE;
D O I
10.1007/s11469-012-9397-y
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
Preserving confidentiality is problematic for human service practitioners if they know that a client is seriously harming a third party or could do so in the future. The present study concerned financial harm, as generated by gambling-related theft. Clients who disclose gambling-related theft potentially create a dilemma for practitioners, who may need to consider whether they have a professional duty to warn or in other ways protect third parties who are identifiable but uninvolved in treatment. Study participants included specialist gambling counsellors, practitioners working in agencies likely to attract clients with gambling problems and students in training. Data was collected by means of an online survey. Findings reveal how practitioners construe their profession's legal and ethical obligations when clients admit to gambling-related theft and when they personally believe that disclosure is warranted. Areas of uncertainty and disagreement have import for employing agencies, professional associations and tertiary training institutions.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 49
页数:19
相关论文
共 63 条
[1]   PATHOLOGICAL GAMBLING AND THE FAMILY - PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS [J].
ABBOTT, DA ;
CRAMER, SL ;
SHERRETS, SD .
FAMILIES IN SOCIETY-THE JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HUMAN SERVICES, 1995, 76 (04) :213-219
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1974, Obedience to authority
[3]  
[Anonymous], TRENDS ISSUES CRIME
[4]  
Banks S, 1998, BRIT J SOC WORK, V28, P213
[5]  
Blaszczynski A P, 1994, J Gambl Stud, V10, P99, DOI 10.1007/BF02109935
[6]  
Brading R, 2005, COLLATERAL DAMAGE LE, V15
[7]   Facilitated disclosure versus clinical accommodation of infidelity secrets: An early pivot point in couple therapy. Part 2: Therapy ethics, pragmatics, and protocol [J].
Butler, Mark H. ;
Seedall, Ryan B. ;
Harper, James M. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF FAMILY THERAPY, 2008, 36 (04) :265-283
[8]   Infidelity Secrets in Couple Therapy: Therapists' Views on the Collision of Competing Ethics Around Relationship-Relevant Secrets [J].
Butler, Mark H. ;
Rodriguez, Mary-Kathryn Amott ;
Roper, Susanne Olsen ;
Feinauer, Leslie L. .
SEXUAL ADDICTION & COMPULSIVITY-THE JOURNAL OF TREATMENT AND PREVENTION, 2010, 17 (02) :82-105
[9]  
Castellani B, 2000, PATHOLOGICAL GAMBLING, P3
[10]   ADOLESCENTS ATTITUDES TOWARDS CONFIDENTIALITY BETWEEN THE SCHOOL COUNSELOR AND THE ADOLESCENT CLIENT [J].
COLLINS, N ;
KNOWLES, AD .
AUSTRALIAN PSYCHOLOGIST, 1995, 30 (03) :179-182