Terry Casey – Ethics with Minors for North Carolina Mental Health Professionals: How to Navigate the Most Challenging Issues
Salepage : Terry Casey – Ethics with Minors for North Carolina Mental Health Professionals: How to Navigate the Most Challenging Issues
Archive : Terry Casey – Ethics with Minors for North Carolina Mental Health Professionals: How to Navigate the Most Challenging Issues Digital Download
Delivery : Digital Download Immediately
- Terry Casey is a member of the faculty.
6 hours and 16 minutes.
Audio and video formats are available.
Copyright: September 18, 2020
DescriptionThose of us who work with kids and their families are subjected to a barrage of emotions. There is uncertainty about changing ethical codes and laws, fear that our actions will cause long-term developmental damage, and worry that we will unintentionally cross a line that will jeopardize our professional license and put us in legal danger. In this setting, we may find it difficult to perform as professionals and assist our clients.
Terry Casey, PhD, HSP will provide you with a solid foundation for evaluating ethical options when working with minors and their families by combining a step-by-step guide to an effective decision-making model, the most up-to-date ethical codes and legal statutes, and lessons from 30 years as a clinician and ethics professor. You will feel much more confident in your decisions regarding mandatory reporting, access to minors’ records, parental rights, boundary issues, touch, and other issues.
Handouts
North Carolina Mental Health Professionals’ Manual on Ethics with Minors (2 MB)
Outline of 140 pages available after purchase
WHAT MAKES WORKING WITH MINORS DIFFERENT?
Power disparities and vulnerability
Federal and state statutes establishing legal obligations
Problems with older teenagersMINORS’ CONSENT RULES AND PROBLEMS
Assent vs. consent
Who has the authority to give consent?
Rules governing parental rights and consent
Special rules apply to older adolescents.
Process of informed consentWHEN A CHILD IS (OR IS NOT) A CLIENT
When does a person become a client?
Representatives for individuals
Legal vs. ethical considerationsSTANDARDS OF CONFIDENTIALITY AND LIMITATIONS WITH MINORS
Confidentiality constraints
Interactions with minors and parents
The technique of progressive scenarios
Agreements between parentsPARENTAL RIGHTS…AND MISTAKES
Default privileges
Situations unique
ExceptionsMINORS’ RECORDS CONTROL
Health records versus educational records
FERPA vs. HIPAA
Who has access to what?
Responding to records requests
Notes from psychotherapy and clinical recordsCAPTURED IN THE MIDDLE OF DIVORCE
Process of informed consent
Parenting strategies
Additional legal considerations
As an example,REPORTING REQUIREMENTS: THE “WHAT,” “WHEN,” AND “TO WHOM”
Laws requiring mandatory reporting
Child abuse as defined by the federal government
State legislation
Moral considerations
As an example,MINORS AND BORDER ISSUES
Policies on social media
Several relationships
Power disparities
Relationships that exist only online
Case Studies in Texting and MessagingPHYSICAL CONTACT
When to use it and when not to use it
Consent after being informed
Policies in the workplace
As an example,
FacultyDr. Terry Casey 20 related seminars and products
TERRY CASEY, PhD, is a licensed psychologist and HSP health service provider with over 30 years of professional experience, including a 16-year stint as the director of counseling and psychological services for a non-profit organization with over 30 counselors in over a dozen locations. He has a private practice in Franklin, Tennessee, and teaches counseling ethics and professional issues at Lipscomb University’s graduate program in clinical mental health counseling, as well as guest lecturing at Trevecca Nazarene University’s PhD program in Clinical counseling. Dr. Casey also served as the chair of the Tennessee Licensed Professional Counselors’ Association’s ethics committee for several years and as an advisor to graduate counseling programs at two universities. He has given numerous ethics presentations to organizations such as the American Counseling Association, Tennessee Licensed Professional Counselors Association, Nashville Area Association of Christian Counselors, and others. Visit his practice website at rencounselingtn.com for more information.
Disclosures for Speakers:
Dr. Terry Casey works as a private practitioner. He works as an adjunct professor at Lipscomb University. PESI, Inc. provides Dr. Casey with a speaking honorarium.
Dr. Terry Casey belongs to the American Psychological Association and the American Counseling Association.
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