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 36-24 - Code of Ethics for Marriage and Family Therapists
Universal Citation: SC Code Regs 36-24
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
(A) Responsibility to Clients.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
discriminate against or refuse professional service to anyone on the basis of
race, gender, religion, national origin, or sexual orientation.
(2) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
exploit the trust and dependency of clients and shall avoid dual relationships
with clients that could impair professional judgment or increase the risk of
exploitation. When a dual relationship cannot be avoided, therapists shall take
appropriate professional precautions to ensure judgment is not impaired and no
exploitation occurs. Marriage and Family Therapists shall not engage in sexual
relationships with clients and shall not engage in sexual relationships with
former clients for at least two (2) years following the termination of
therapy.
(3) Marriage and Family
Therapists shall not use their professional relationships with clients to
further their own interests.
(4)
Marriage and Family Therapists shall respect the right of clients to make
decisions and help them to understand the consequences of their decisions.
Therapists shall clearly advise clients that a decision as to marital status is
the responsibility of the client.
(5) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
continue therapeutic relationships so long as is reasonably clear that clients
are benefitting from the relationship.
(6) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
assist persons in obtaining other therapeutic services if the therapist is
unable or unwilling, for appropriate reasons, to provide professional
help.
(7) Marriage and Family
Therapists shall not abandon or neglect clients in treatment without making
reasonable arrangements for the continuation of such treatment.
(8) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
obtain written informed consent from clients before videotaping, audio
recording, or permitting third party observation.
(B) Confidentiality.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
disclose client confidences except as mandated by law or described in this
chapter.
(2) Marriage and Family
Therapists may use client and/or clinical materials in teaching, writing, and
public presentations only if the client has executed a written waiver or when
appropriate steps have been taken to protect the identity of the
client.
(3) Marriage and Family
Therapists shall store or dispose of all client records in a manner that will
protect confidentiality.
(C) Professional Competence and Integrity.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
immediately notify all appropriate agencies, including, but not limited to the
Board, of any criminal conviction; of any conduct which may lead to a
conviction; any actions disciplining or expelling them from any professional
organization; suspension, revocation, or other discipline by any regulatory
body; of incompetency due to physical or mental causes or the abuse of alcohol
or other substances.
(2) Marriage
and Family Therapists shall seek appropriate professional assistance for their
personal problems or conflicts that may impair work performance or clinical
judgment.
(3) Marriage and Family
Therapists who function as teachers, supervisors, or researchers shall maintain
the highest standards of scholarship and present accurate
information.
(4) Marriage and
Family Therapists shall remain abreast of new developments in knowledge and
practice through educational activities.
(5) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
engage in sexual or other harassment or exploitation of clients, students,
trainees, supervisees, employees, colleagues, research subjects, or actual or
potential witnesses or complainants in investigations and ethical
proceedings.
(6) Marriage and
Family Therapists shall not diagnose, treat, or advise on problems outside the
recognized boundaries of their competence, as established by the
Board.
(7) Marriage and Family
Therapists shall make every effort to prevent the distortion or misuse of their
clinical and research findings.
(8)
Marriage and Family Therapists shall exercise special care when making public
their professional recommendations and opinions through testimony or other
public statements.
(D) Responsibility to Students, Employees, and Supervisees.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
exploit the trust and dependency of students, employees, and supervisees and
shall avoid dual relationships that could impair professional judgment or
increase the risk of exploitation. When a dual relationship cannot be avoided,
therapists shall take appropriate professional precautions to ensure judgment
is not impaired and no exploitation occurs. A Marriage and Family Therapist
shall not provide therapy to an employee, student or supervisee. Sexual
intimacy with students, or supervisees is prohibited.
(2) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
permit students, employees, or supervisees to perform or hold themselves out as
competent to perform professional services beyond their training, level of
experience, and competence.
(3)
Marriage and Family Therapists shall not disclose supervisee confidences except
as mandated by law and described in this chapter.
(E) Responsibility to Research Participants.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists
functioning as investigators shall make careful examinations of ethical
acceptability in planning studies. To the extent that services to research
participants may be compromised by participation in research, Marriage and
Family Therapists shall seek the ethical advice of qualified professionals not
directly involved in the investigation and observe safeguards to protect the
rights of the research participants.
(2) Marriage and Family Therapists
functioning as investigators shall inform research participants of all aspects
of the research that might reasonably be expected to influence willingness to
participate. Marriage and Family Therapists shall be sensitive to the
possibility of diminished consent when participants are receiving clinical
services, have impairments which limit understanding and/or communication, or
when participants are children.
(3)
Marriage and Family Therapists functioning as investigators shall respect
participants' freedom to decline participation in or to withdraw from a
research study at any time. This obligation requires special thought and
consideration when Marriage and Family Therapists or other members of the
research team are in positions of authority or influence over participants.
Therapists shall make every effort to avoid dual relationships with research
participants that could impair professional judgment or increase the risk of
exploitation.
(4) Marriage and
Family Therapists shall maintain confidentiality during any investigation
unless there is a waiver obtained in writing. When the possibility exists that
others, including family members, may obtain access to such information, this
possibility, together with the plan for protecting confidentiality, is
explained as part of the procedure for obtaining informed consent.
(F) Responsibility to the Profession.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists
shall maintain the standards of the profession when acting as members or
employees of organizations.
(2)
Marriage and Family Therapists shall assign publication credit to those who
have contributed to a publication in proportion to their contributions and in
accordance with customary professional publication practices.
(3) Marriage and Family Therapists who are
the authors of books shall cite persons to whom credit for original ideas is
due.
(4) Marriage and Family
Therapists who are the authors of books or other materials published or
distributed by an organization shall take reasonable precautions to ensure that
the organization promotes and advertises the materials accurately and
factually.
(5) Marriage and Family
Therapists should participate in activities that contribute to a better
community and society, including devoting a portion of their professional
activity to services for which there is little or no financial
return.
(6) Marriage and Family
Therapists should be concerned with developing laws and regulations pertaining
to the practice of marriage and family therapy that serve the public interest,
and with altering such laws and regulations that are not in the public
interest.
(7) Marriage and Family
Therapists should encourage public participation in the design and delivery of
professional services and in the regulation of practitioners.
(G) Financial Arrangements.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
offer or accept payment for referrals.
(2) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
charge excessive fees for services and shall not barter therapy
services.
(3) Marriage and Family
Therapists shall disclose their fees to clients and supervisees at the
initiation of services.
(4)
Marriage and Family Therapists shall represent facts truthfully to clients,
third party payors, and supervisees regarding the services rendered.
(H) Advertising.
(1) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
accurately represent their competence, education, training, and experience
relevant to their practice of marriage and family therapy.
(2) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
assure that advertisements and publications in any media conveys information
that is necessary for the public to make an appropriate selection of
professional services.
(3) Marriage
and Family Therapists shall not use a name which could mislead the public
concerning the identity, responsibility, source, and status of those practicing
under that name and shall not hold themselves out as being partners or
associates of a firm when they are not.
(4) Marriage and Family Therapists shall not
use any professional identification if it includes any statement or claim that
is false, fraudulent, misleading, or deceptive. A statement is false,
fraudulent, misleading, or deceptive if it:
(a) contains any material misrepresentation
of fact; or
(b) fails to state any
material fact necessary to make the statement, in light of all circumstances,
not misleading; or
(c) is intended
to or is likely to create an unjustified expectation.
(5) Marriage and Family Therapists shall
correct, wherever possible, false, misleading, or inaccurate information and
representations made by others concerning the therapist's qualifications,
services, or products.
(6) Marriage
and Family Therapists shall insure that the qualifications of persons in their
employ are represented in a manner that is not false, misleading, or
deceptive.
(7) Marriage and Family
Therapists may represent themselves as specializing within a limited area of
marriage and family therapy, but shall not advertise specialization in any area
unless they have the education and supervised experience in settings which meet
recognized professional standards to practice in that specialty area.
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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