Assignment For 29.04.2021
Assignment For 29.04.2021
Assignment For 29.04.2021
Mandatory ethics is the view of ethical practice that deals with the minimum level of
professional practice, while aspirational ethics is a higher level of ethical practice that
addresses doing what is in the best interests of clients. Additionally, positive ethics is an
approach taken by practitioners who want to do their best for clients rather than simply meet
minimum standards to stay out of trouble. Professional codes of ethics serve the following
functions (Corey, 2009):
1. Educate therapists and the general public about the responsibilities of the profession
2. Provide a basis for accountability
3. Protect clients from unethical practices
4. Provide basis for self-reflection and improvement of professional practice.
According to Corey (2009), following are the ethics that should be observed by
therapists:
1. Balancing clients’ needs before the therapist’s own : It is essential for therapists to
become aware of their own needs, areas of unfinished business, potential personal
problems, and their sources of countertransference. These factors could interfere with
effectively and ethically serving clients. As helping professionals, therapists have
responsibilities to work actively toward expanding their self-awareness and to learn to
recognize areas of prejudice and vulnerability. Being aware of personal problems and
willingness to work through them leaves less chance that they will project them onto
clients. If certain problem areas surface and old conflicts become reactivated, they
have an ethical obligation to seek personal therapy to avoid harming clients.
2. Ethical decision making: Therapists can ensure ethical decision making in the
following ways:
a. Identify the problem or dilemma. Gather information that will shed light on
the nature of the problem. This will help the therapist decide whether the
problem is mainly ethical, legal, professional, clinical, or moral.
b. Identify the potential issues. Evaluate the rights, responsibilities, and welfare
of all those who are involved in the situation.
c. Look at the relevant ethics codes for general guidance on the matter. Consider
whether the therapist’s own values and ethics are consistent with or in conflict
with the relevant guidelines.
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d. Consider the applicable laws and regulations, and determine how they may
have a bearing on an ethical dilemma.
e. Seek consultation from more than one source to obtain various perspectives on
the dilemma, and document in the client’s record what suggestions the
therapist received from this consultation.
f. Brainstorm various possible courses of action. Continue discussing options
with other professionals. Include the client in this process of considering
options for action. Again, document the nature of this discussion with the
therapist’s client.
g. Enumerate the consequences of various decisions, and reflect on the
implications of each course of action for the therapist’s client.
h. Decide on what appears to be the best possible course of action. Once the
course of action has been implemented, follow up to evaluate the outcomes
and to determine if further action is necessary. Document the reasons for the
actions the therapist took as well as your evaluation measures.
3. Right of Informed Consent: Informed consent involves the right of clients to be
informed about their therapy and to make autonomous decisions pertaining to it.
Providing clients with information they need to make informed choices tends to
promote the active cooperation of clients in their counseling plan. By educating the
clients about their rights and responsibilities, the therapist both empowers them and
builds a trusting relationship with them.
Some aspects of the informed consent process include the general goals of counseling,
the responsibilities of the counselor toward the client, the responsibilities of clients,
limitations of and exceptions to confidentiality, legal and ethical parameters that could
define the relationship, the qualifications and background of the practitioner, the fees
involved, the services the client can expect, and the approximate length of the
therapeutic process. Further areas might include the benefits of counseling, the risks
involved, and the possibility that the client’s case will be discussed with the therapist’s
colleagues or supervisors.
4. Confidentiality: Confidentiality is an ethical concept, and the duty of therapists to not
disclose information about a client. Professionals have the responsibility to define the
degree of confidentiality that can be promised. Counselors have an ethical and legal
responsibility to discuss the nature and purpose of confidentiality with their clients
early in the counseling process. In addition, clients have a right to know that their
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outset (1) which of the individuals are clients/patients and (2) the relationship the
psychologist will have with each person. This clarification includes the psychologist's
role and the probable uses of the services provided or the information obtained. If it
becomes apparent that psychologists may be called on to perform potentially
conflicting roles, psychologists take reasonable steps to clarify and modify, or
withdraw from, roles appropriately.
3. Group Therapy: When psychologists provide services to several persons in a group
setting, they describe at the outset the roles and responsibilities of all parties and the
limits of confidentiality.
4. Providing Therapy to Those Served by Others: In deciding whether to offer or provide
services to those already receiving mental health services elsewhere, psychologists
carefully consider the treatment issues and the potential client's/patient's welfare.
Psychologists discuss these issues with the client/patient or another legally authorized
person on behalf of the client/patient in order to minimize the risk of confusion and
conflict, consult with the other service providers when appropriate, and proceed with
caution and sensitivity to the therapeutic issues.
5. Sexual Intimacies with Current Therapy Clients/Patients: Psychologists do not engage
in sexual intimacies with current therapy clients/patients.
6. Sexual Intimacies with Relatives or Significant Others of Current Therapy
Clients/Patients: Psychologists do not engage in sexual intimacies with individuals
they know to be close relatives, guardians, or significant others of current
clients/patients. Psychologists do not terminate therapy to circumvent this standard.
7. Therapy with Former Sexual Partners: Psychologists do not accept as therapy
clients/patients persons with whom they have engaged in sexual intimacies.
8. Sexual Intimacies with Former Therapy Clients/Patients: Psychologists do not engage
in sexual intimacies with former clients/patients for at least two years after cessation
or termination of therapy. Psychologists do not engage in sexual intimacies with
former clients/patients even after a two-year interval except in the most unusual
circumstances.
9. Interruption of Therapy: When entering into employment or contractual relationships,
psychologists make reasonable efforts to provide for orderly and appropriate
resolution of responsibility for client/patient care in the event that the employment or
contractual relationship ends, with paramount consideration given to the welfare of
the client/patient.
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2. Promoting the Rights of Persons with Mental Illness: The Act quotes a few specific
rights of patients that need to be upheld during services. All of these need to be
thoroughly understood and essentially practiced during the delivery of care. Human
rights that are given major importance include the right to access mental health care
and treatment without discrimination and good quality mental health services at
affordable prices. The facilities include acute care and OP and IP treatment. The onus
is upon the government, MHPs, and MHEs to ensure that the rights are not violated.
terror, and disintegration of the sense of self. The source of pathological anxiety
results from cumulative experiential traumas during development.
Regardless of the theoretical model, all psychodynamic approaches are founded on
the premise that psychotic symptoms have meaning in schizophrenia. Patients, for example,
may become grandiose after an injury to their self-esteem. Similarly, all theories recognize
that human relatedness may be terrifying for persons with schizophrenia. Although research
on the efficacy of psychotherapy with schizophrenia shows mixed results, concerned persons
who offer compassion and a sanctuary in the confusing world of schizophrenia must be a
cornerstone of any overall treatment plan. Long-term follow-up studies show that some
patients who bury psychotic episodes probably do not benefit from exploratory
psychotherapy, but those who are able to integrate the psychotic experience into their lives
may benefit from some insight-oriented approaches. There is renewed interest in the use of
long-term individual psychotherapy in the treatment of schizophrenia, especially when
combined with medication.
Learning Theories
According to learning theorists, children who later have schizophrenia learn irrational
reactions and ways of thinking by imitating parents who have their own significant emotional
problems. In learning theory, the poor interpersonal relationships of persons with
schizophrenia develop because of poor models for learning during childhood.
Family Dynamics
1. Double Bind: The double-bind concept was formulated by Gregory Bateson and
Donald Jackson to describe a hypothetical family in which children receive
conflicting parental messages about their behavior, attitudes, and feelings. In
Bateson’s hypothesis, children withdraw into a psychotic state to escape the
unsolvable confusion of the double bind. The theory has value only as a descriptive
pattern, not as a causal explanation of schizophrenia.
2. Schisms & Skewed Families: Theodore Lidz described two abnormal patterns of
family behavior. In one family type, with a prominent schism between the parents,
one parent is overly close to a child of the opposite gender. In the other family type, a
skewed relationship between a child and one parent involves a power struggle
between the parents and the resulting dominance of one parent. These dynamics stress
the tenuous adaptive capacity of the person with schizophrenia.
3. Pseudomutual and Pseudohostile Families: As described by Lyman Wynne, some
families suppress emotional expression by consistently using pseudo-mutual or
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awkward gait, facial grimacing, and stereotypies. Because the basal ganglia and
cerebellum are involved in the control of movement, disease in these areas is
implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. Second, the movement disorders
involving the basal ganglia (e.g., Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease) are the
ones most commonly associated with psychosis. Neuropathological studies of the
basal ganglia have produced variable and inconclusive reports about cell loss or the
reduction of volume of the globus pallidus and the substantia nigra. Studies have also
shown an increase in the number of D2 receptors in the caudate, the putamen, and the
nucleus accumbens.
Neural Circuits
Recent studies view schizophrenia as a disorder of brain neural circuits. For example,
as mentioned previously, the basal ganglia and cerebellum are reciprocally connected to the
frontal lobes, and the abnormalities in frontal lobe function seen in some brain imaging
studies may be due to disease in either area rather than in the frontal lobes themselves. It is
also hypothesized that an early developmental lesion of the dopaminergic tracts to the
prefrontal cortex results in the disturbance of prefrontal and limbic system function and leads
to the positive and negative symptoms and cognitive impairments observed in patients with
schizophrenia.
Of particular interest in the context of neural circuit hypotheses linking the prefrontal
cortex and limbic system are studies demonstrating a relationship between hippocampal
morphological abnormalities and disturbances in prefrontal cortex metabolism or function
(or both). Data from functional and structural imaging studies in humans suggest that
whereas dysfunction of the anterior cingulate basal ganglia thalamocortical circuit
underlies the production of positive psychotic symptoms, dysfunction of the dorsolateral
prefrontal circuit underlies the production of primary, enduring, negative or decit
symptoms. There is a neural basis for cognitive functions that is impaired in patients with
schizophrenia. The observation of the relationship among impaired working memory
performance, disrupted prefrontal neuronal integrity, altered prefrontal, cingulate, and
inferior parietal cortex, and altered hippocampal blood ow provides strong support for
disruption of the normal working memory neural circuit in patients with schizophrenia.
The involvement of this circuit, at least for auditory hallucinations, has been documented in
a number of functional imaging studies that contrast hallucinating and non hallucinating
patients.
Brain Metabolism
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reactivity to neurons, and the presence of brain-directed antibodies. Most carefully conducted
investigations that have searched for evidence of neurotoxic viral infections in schizophrenia
have had negative results, although epidemiological data show a high incidence of
schizophrenia after prenatal exposure to influenza during several epidemics of the disease.
Other data supporting a viral hypothesis are an increased number of physical anomalies at
birth, an increased rate of pregnancy and birth complications, seasonality of birth consistent
with viral infection, geographical clusters of adult cases, and seasonality of hospitalizations.
Psychoneuroendocrinology
Many reports describe neuroendocrine differences between groups of patients with
schizophrenia and groups of control subjects. For example, results of the dexamethasone
suppression test have been reported to be abnormal in various subgroups of patients with
schizophrenia, although the practical or predictive value of the test in schizophrenia has been
questioned. One carefully done report, however, has correlated persistent nonsuppression on
the dexamethasone-suppression test in schizophrenia with a poor long term outcome.
Some data suggest decreased concentrations of luteinizing hormone or
follicle-stimulating hormone, perhaps correlated with age of onset and length of illness. Two
additional reported abnormalities may be correlated with the presence of negative symptoms:
a blunted release of prolactin and growth hormone on gonadotropin-releasing hormone or
thyrotropin-releasing hormone stimulation and a blunted release of growth hormone on
apomorphine stimulation.
Rhesus-Incompatibility
Hollister, Laing, and Mednick (1996) have shown that the rate of schizophrenia is
about 2.1 percent in males who are Rh-incompatible with their mothers. For males who have
no such incompatibility with their mothers, the rate of schizophrenia is 0.8 percent very near
the expected base rate found in the general population. One possibility is that the mechanism
involves oxygen deprivation, or hypoxia. This suggestion is supported by studies that have
linked the risk for schizophrenia to birth complications. Recent research also suggests that
incompatibility between the blood of the mother and the blood of the fetus may increase the
risk of brain abnormalities of the type known to be associated with schizophrenia.
Pregnancy and Birth Complications
Patients with schizophrenia are much more likely to have been born following a
pregnancy or delivery that was complicated in some way. Although the type of obstetric
complication varies, many delivery problems (for example, breech delivery, prolonged labor,
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or the umbilical cord around the baby’s neck) affect the oxygen supply of the newborn. The
research again points toward damage to the brain at a critical time of development.
Maternal Stress
If a mother experiences an extremely stressful event late in her first trimester of
pregnancy or early in the second trimester the risk of schizophrenia in her child is increased.
For example, in a large population study conducted in Denmark, the death of a close relative
during the first trimester was associated with a 67 percent increase in the risk of
schizophrenia in the child. Currently, it is thought that the increase in stress hormones that
pass to the fetus via the placenta might have negative effects on the developing brain,
although the mechanisms through which maternal stress increases risk for schizophrenia are
not yet well understood.
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References
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Thomson Brooks/Cole.
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Liabilities and penalties under Mental Healthcare Act 2017. Indian Journal Of
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