Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
A. The
protection of the public's health, safety, and welfare and the best interest of
the public shall be the primary guide in determining the appropriate
professional conduct of all persons whose activities are regulated by the
board. Regardless of the delivery method, whether in person, by phone or
electronically, these standards shall apply to the practice of marriage and
family therapy.
B. Persons licensed
or registered by the board shall:
1. Practice
in a manner that is in the best interest of the public and does not endanger
the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of
their competence, based on their education, training, supervised experience,
and appropriate professional experience and represent their education,
training, and experience accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new marriage and family
therapy information, concepts, applications, and practices that are necessary
to providing appropriate, effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered
to clients as necessary and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic
purposes;
5. Document the need for
and steps taken to terminate a counseling relationship when it becomes clear
that the client is not benefiting from the relationship. Document the
assistance provided in making appropriate arrangements for the continuation of
treatment for clients, when necessary, following termination of a counseling
relationship;
6. Make appropriate
arrangements for continuation of services, when necessary, during interruptions
such as vacations, unavailability, relocation, illness, and
disability;
7. Disclose to clients
all experimental methods of treatment and inform client of the risks and
benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that the welfare of the client is not
compromised in any experimentation or research involving those
clients;
8. Neither accept nor give
commissions, rebates or other forms of remuneration for referral of clients for
professional services;
9. Inform
clients of the purposes, goals, techniques, procedures, limitations, potential
risks, and benefits of services to be performed; the limitations of
confidentiality; and other pertinent information when counseling is initiated
and throughout the counseling process as necessary. Provide clients with
accurate information regarding the implications of diagnosis, the intended use
of tests and reports, fees, and billing arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that
are valid, reliable, and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of
individuals not represented in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving
services from another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from
providing services to the client without having an informed consent discussion
with the client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in
connection with one's practice as a mental health professional those
educational and professional degrees or titles that have been earned at a
college or university accredited by an accrediting agency recognized by the
U.S. Department of Education, or credentials granted by a national certifying
agency, and that are counseling in nature;
13. Advertise professional services fairly
and accurately in a manner that is not false, misleading or deceptive;
and
14. Not engage in conversion
therapy with any person younger than 18 years of age.
C. In regard to patient records, persons
licensed by the board shall:
1. Maintain
written or electronic clinical records for each client to include treatment
dates and identifying information to substantiate diagnosis and treatment plan,
client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform
all employees of the requirements of confidentiality and provide for the
destruction of records that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures
client confidentiality;
3. Disclose
or release client records to others only with clients' expressed written
consent or that of their legally authorized representative in accordance with
§
32.1-127.1:03
of the Code of Virginia;
4. Ensure
confidentiality in the usage of client records and clinical materials by
obtaining informed consent from clients or their legally authorized
representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio recording, (iii) permitting
third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable client records and clinical
materials in teaching, writing, or public presentations; and
5. Maintain client records for a minimum of
five years or as otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the
counseling relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall
be maintained for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or
10 years following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual
obligation or federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time;
or
c. Records that have transferred
to another mental health service provider or given to the client or his legally
authorized representative.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons
licensed by the board shall:
1. Avoid dual
relationships with clients that could impair professional judgment or increase
the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such relationships include familial,
social, financial, business, bartering, or close personal relationships with
clients. Marriage and family therapists shall take appropriate professional
precautions when a dual relationship cannot be avoided, such as informed
consent, consultation, supervision, and documentation to ensure that judgment
is not impaired and no exploitation occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic
relationships or sexual intimacies with clients or those included in a
collateral relationship with the client and also not counsel persons with whom
they have had a sexual intimacy or romantic relationship. Marriage and family
therapists shall not engage in romantic relationships or sexual intimacies with
former clients within a minimum of five years after terminating the counseling
relationship. Marriage and family therapists who engage in such relationship or
intimacy after five years following termination shall have the responsibility
to examine and document thoroughly that such relations do not have an
exploitive nature, based on factors such as duration of counseling, amount of
time since counseling, termination circumstances, client's personal history and
mental status, or adverse impact on the client. A client's consent to,
initiation of or participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a
marriage and family therapist does not change the nature of the conduct nor
lift the regulatory prohibition;
3.
Not engage in any romantic relationships or sexual relationship or establish a
counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a supervisee or student.
Marriage and family therapists shall avoid any nonsexual dual relationship with
a supervisee or student in which there is a risk of exploitation or potential
harm to the supervisee or student or the potential for interference with the
supervisor's professional judgment; and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform
all parties of the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities
involved.
E. Persons
licensed by this board shall report to the board known or suspected violations
of the laws and regulations governing the practice of marriage and family
therapy.
F. Persons licensed by the
board shall advise their clients of their right to report to the Department of
Health Professions any information of which the licensee may become aware in
his professional capacity indicating that there is a reasonable probability
that a person licensed or certified as a mental health service provider, as
defined in §
54.1-2400.1
of the Code of Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent or
unprofessional conduct as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and
regulations.
Statutory Authority: §
54.1-2400
of the Code of Virginia.