South Carolina Code of Regulations
Chapter 36 - DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, LICENSING AND REGULATION BOARD OF EXAMINERS FOR LICENSURE OF PROFESSIONAL COUNSELORS, MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS, ADDICTION COUNSELORS, AND PSYCHO-EDUCATIONAL SPECIALISTS
Article 7 - CODES OF ETHICS
Section 36-22 - Code of Ethics for Professional Counselors
Universal Citation: SC Code Regs 36-22
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
(A) General.
(1) Professional Counselors shall engage in
continuous efforts to improve professional practices, services, and research
and shall be guided in their work by evidence of the best professional
practices.
(2) Professional
Counselors shall recognize their responsibility to the clients they serve and
the institutions in which the services are performed and shall strive to assist
the respective agency, organization, or institution in providing competent and
ethical professional services. The acceptance of employment in an institution
shall mean that the Professional Counselor is in agreement with the general
policies and principles of the institution and that the professional activities
of the Professional Counselor are in accord with the objectives of the
institution. If the Professional Counselor and the employer do not agree and
cannot reach agreement on policies that are consistent with appropriate
counselor ethical practice that is conducive to client growth and development,
the Professional Counselor shall terminate his employment and strive to change
the unethical practice through appropriate professional
organizations.
(3) Professional
Counselors shall engage in ethical behavior at all times and shall take
immediate action to report unethical behavior by professional interns to the
Board or other appropriate authority.
(4) Professional Counselors must refuse
remuneration for consultation or counseling with persons who are entitled to
these services through the counselor's employing institution or agency and
shall not divert to their private practices, without the mutual consent of the
institution and the client, legitimate clients in their primary agencies, or
the institutions with which they are affiliated.
(5) In establishing fees, Professional
Counselors shall consider the financial status of clients, and if the
established fee is inappropriate, must provide assistance to the client in
finding comparable services at an acceptable cost. Professional Counselors
shall not enter into any agreement wherein counseling services are exchanged as
barter.
(6) Professional Counselors
shall offer only professional services for which they are trained or have
supervised experience. No diagnosis, assessment, or treatment shall be
performed without prior training or supervision. Professional Counselors shall
correct any misrepresentation of their qualifications by others.
(7) Professional Counselors shall recognize
their limitations and provide services or use techniques for which they are
qualified by training and/or supervision. Professional Counselors shall
recognize the need for and seek continuing education to assure competent
services.
(8) Professional
Counselors must be aware of the intimacy in the counseling relationship and
maintain respect for the client and must not engage in activities that seek to
meet their personal or professional needs at the expense of the
client.
(9) Professional Counselors
shall not engage in personal, social, organizational, financial, or political
activities which might lead to a misuse of their influence.
(10) Professional Counselors shall not engage
in sexual intimacy with clients and shall not be sexually, physically, or
romantically intimate with clients, nor engage in sexual, physical, or romantic
intimacy with clients within two (2) years after terminating the counseling
relationship.
(11) Professional
Counselors shall not engage in sexual harassment or other unwelcome comments,
gestures, or physical contact of a sexual nature, nor shall they condone such
conduct in others.
(12)
Professional Counselors shall guard the individual rights and personal dignity
of their clients in the counseling relationship through an awareness of the
impact of stereotyping and unwarranted discrimination.
(13) Professional Counselors shall be
accountable at all times for their behavior and must be aware that all actions
and behaviors reflect on professional integrity and, when inappropriate, can
damage the public trust in the counseling profession. To protect public
confidence in the counseling profession, Professional Counselors shall avoid
behavior that is clearly in violation of accepted moral and legal
standards.
(14) Professional
Counselors shall observe this Code of Ethics in all products and services
offered, including but not limited to classroom instruction, public lectures,
demonstrations, written articles, radio, and television programs.
(15) Professional Counselors must withdraw
from the practice of counseling if the mental or physical condition of the
Counselor renders it unlikely that a professional relationship can be
maintained.
(B) Counseling Relationship.
(1) Professional
Counselors shall respect the integrity and promote the welfare of clients,
whether they are assisted individually, in family units, or in group
counseling. In group settings, the Professional Counselor shall be responsible
for taking reasonable precautions to protect individuals from physical and/or
psychological trauma resulting from interaction within the group.
(2) Professional Counselors shall take into
account the traditions and practices of other professional disciplines with
whom they work and cooperate fully with them. If a person is receiving similar
services from another professional, Professional Counselors shall not offer
their own services directly to such a person. If a Professional Counselor is
contacted by a person who is already receiving similar services from another
professional, the Professional Counselor must carefully consider that
professional relationship and the client's welfare and proceed with caution and
sensitivity to the therapeutic needs of the client. When Professional
Counselors learn that their clients are in a professional relationship with
another mental health professional, the Professional Counselor must request
release from the client to inform the other mental health professional of their
relationship with the client and strive to establish positive and collaborative
professional relationships that are in the best interest of the client.
Professional Counselors shall discuss these issues with the client and the
mental health professional so as to minimize the risk of confusion and conflict
and encourage clients to inform other professionals of the new professional
relationship.
(3) Professional
Counselors may consult with any other professionally competent person about a
client and shall inform the client of this possibility. Professional Counselors
must avoid placing a consultant in a conflict-of-interest situation that would
preclude the consultant serving as a proper party to the efforts to assist the
client.
(4) Professional Counselors
may share confidential information when there is a clear and imminent danger to
the client and others, as provided by law.
(5) Professional Counselors shall maintain
records of the counseling relationship which may include interview notes, test
data, correspondence, audio or visual tape recordings, electronic data storage,
and other documents. Records shall contain accurate factual data, and the
physical record are the property of the Professional Counselor or their
employers. Professional Counselors shall maintain records in accordance with
the policy of the Board.
(6)
Professional Counselors shall ensure that all data maintained in electronic
storage are secure. Stored data shall be limited to information that is
appropriate and necessary for the services provided and accessible only to
appropriate staff members involved in the provision of services. Professional
Counselors shall ensure that the electronically stored data are destroyed when
the information is no longer of value in providing services or required as part
of the client's record.
(7)
Professional Counselors shall disguise identifying information derived from a
client relationship when that information is used in training or research. Any
data which cannot be disguised may be used only as expressly authorized by the
client's informed consent.
(8)
Professional Counselors shall inform clients of the purposes, goals,
techniques, procedures, limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services
to be performed, and clearly indicate limitations that may affect the
relationship as well as any other pertinent information. Professional
Counselors must take reasonable steps to ensure that clients understand the
implications of any diagnosis, the intended use of tests and reports, methods
of treatment, and safety precautions that must be taken in their use, fees, and
billing arrangements.
(9)
Professional Counselors who have an administrative, supervisory, and/or
evaluative relationship with individuals seeking counseling services shall not
serve as the counselor and shall refer the individual to other professionals.
Exceptions may be made only in instances where an individual's situation
warrants counseling intervention and another alternative is not available. Dual
relationships that might impair the counselor's objectivity and professional
judgment must be avoided and/or the counseling relationship terminated through
referral to a competent professional.
(10) When a Professional Counselor determines
an inability to be of professional assistance to a potential or existing
client, the counselor must, respectively, not initiate the counseling
relationship or immediately terminate the relationship. In either event, the
counselor must suggest appropriate alternatives and be knowledgeable about
referral resources so that a satisfactory referral can be initiated. If the
client declines the referral, the counselor shall not be obligated to continue
the relationship.
(11) When
engaging in intensive, short-term counseling, a Professional Counselor shall
ensure that professional assistance is available at normal costs to clients
during and following the short-term counseling.
(12) Professional Counselors who employ
electronic means in which the counselor and client are not in immediate
proximity must present clients with local sources of care before establishing a
continued short or long-term relationship.
(13) Professional Counselors shall obtain
legal authorization to practice in any jurisdiction in which they maintain an
electronic presence via the internet or other electronic means.
(14) Professional Counselors shall ensure
that clients are intellectually, emotionally, and physically compatible with
computer applications used by the counselor and understand their purpose and
operation.
(15) Professional
Counselors shall maintain client confidentiality as provided by law.
(16) Professional Counselors shall screen
prospective group counseling participants to ensure compatibility with group
objectives.
(C) Measurement and Evaluation.
(1) Professional
Counselors shall recognize the limits of their competence and perform only
those assessment functions for which they have received appropriate training or
supervision.
(2) Professional
Counselors who utilize assessment instruments to assist them with diagnoses
must have appropriate training and skills in educational and mental
measurement, validation criteria, test research, and guidelines for test
development and use.
(3)
Professional Counselors shall provide instrument specific orientation or
information to an examinee prior to and following the administration of
assessment instruments or techniques so that the results may be placed in
proper perspective with other relevant factors. The purpose of testing and the
explicit use of the results must be disclosed to an examinee prior to
testing.
(4) Professional
Counselors shall carefully evaluate the specific theoretical bases and
characteristics, validity, reliability, and appropriateness of an instrument in
selecting the instrument or techniques for use in a given situation or with a
particular client.
(5) Professional
Counselors must provide accurate information and avoid false claims or
misconceptions concerning the meaning of an instrument's reliability and
validity terms when making statements to the public about assessment
instruments or techniques.
(6)
Professional Counselors shall follow the directions and researched procedures
for selection, administration, and interpretation of all evaluation instruments
and use them only within proper contexts.
(7) Professional Counselors shall be cautious
when interpreting the results of instruments that possess insufficient
technical data, and must explicitly state to examinees the specific limitations
and purposes for the use of such instruments.
(8) Professional Counselors shall proceed
cautiously when attempting to evaluate and interpret performance of any person
who cannot be appropriately compared to the norms for the
instruments.
(9) Professional
Counselors shall maintain test security.
(10) Professional Counselors shall consider
psychometric limitations when selecting and using an instrument, and must be
cognizant of the limitations when interpreting the results.
(11) Professional Counselors shall ensure
that appropriate interpretation accompanies any release of individual or group
test data and shall obtain explicit prior understanding and consent when
releasing results.
(12)
Professional Counselors shall ensure that computer-generated test
administration and scoring programs function properly thereby providing clients
with accurate test results.
(13)
Professional Counselors who develop computer-based test interpretations to
support the assessment process shall ensure that the validity of the
interpretations is established prior to the commercial distribution of the
computer application.
(14)
Professional Counselors shall recognize that test results may become obsolete
and avoid the misuse of obsolete data.
(D) Research and Publication.
(1) Professional Counselors shall adhere to
applicable legal and professional guidelines on research with human
subjects.
(2) In planning research
activities involving human subjects, Professional Counselors shall be aware of
and responsive to all pertinent ethical principles and ensure that the research
problem, design, and execution are in full compliance with any pertinent
institutional or governmental regulations.
(3) The ultimate responsibility for ethical
research lies with the principal researcher, although others involved in the
research activities are ethically obligated and responsible for their own
actions.
(4) Professional
Counselors who conduct research with human subjects are responsible for the
welfare of the subjects throughout the experiment and must take all reasonable
precautions to avoid causing injurious psychological, physical, or social
effects on their subjects.
(5)
Professional Counselors who conduct research shall abide by the basic elements
of informed consent:
(a) a fair explanation of
the procedures to be followed, including an identification of those which are
experimental; and
(b) a description
of the attendant discomforts and risks; and
(c) a description of the benefits to be
expected; and
(d) disclosure of
appropriate alternative procedures that would be advantageous for subjects with
an offer to answer any inquiries concerning the procedures; and
(e) an instruction that subjects are free to
withdraw their consent and to discontinue participation in the project or
activity at any time.
(6)
When reporting research results, explicit mention shall be made of all the
variables and conditions known to the investigator that may have affected the
outcome of the study or the interpretation of the data.
(7) Professional Counselors who conduct and
report research investigations shall do so in a manner that minimizes the
possibility that the results will be misleading.
(8) Professional Counselors shall give credit
through joint authorship, acknowledgment, footnote statements, or other
appropriate means to those who have contributed to the research and/or
publication, in accordance with such contributions.
(9) Professional Counselors shall communicate
to other counselors the results of any research judged to be of professional
value.
(E) Consulting.
(1) Professional Counselors, acting as
consultants, must have a high degree of self awareness of their own values,
knowledge, skills, limitations, and needs in entering a helping relationship
that involves human and/or organizational change. The focus of the consulting
relationship must be on the issues to be resolved and not on the persons
presenting the problem.
(2) In the
consulting relationship, the Professional Counselor and the client must
understand and agree upon the problem definition, subsequent goals, and
predicted consequences of interventions selected.
(3) Professional Counselors acting as
consultants must be reasonably certain that they, or the organization
represented, have the necessary competencies and resources for giving the kind
of help that is needed or that may develop later, and that appropriate referral
resources are available.
(4)
Professional Counselors in a consulting relationship must encourage and
cultivate client adaptability and growth toward self-direction. Professional
Counselors must maintain this role consistently and not become a decision maker
for clients or create a future dependency on the consultant.
(F) Private Practice.
(1) In advertising services as a private
practitioner, Professional Counselors must advertise in a manner that
accurately informs the public of the professional services, expertise, and
techniques of counseling available.
(2) Professional Counselors who assume an
executive leadership role in a private practice organization shall not permit
their names to be used in professional notices during periods of time when they
are not actively engaged in the private practice of counseling unless their
executive roles are clearly stated.
(3) Professional Counselors shall make
available their highest degree (described by discipline), type and level of
certification, and/or license, address, telephone number, office hours, type
and/or description of services, and other relevant information. Listed
information must not contain false, inaccurate, misleading, partial,
out-of-context, or otherwise deceptive material or statements.
(4) Professional Counselors who are involved
in a partnership/corporation with other certified counselors and/or other
professionals, must clearly specify all relevant specialties of each member of
the partnership or corporation.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. South Carolina may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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