Anger-Buster.info edorses the Code of Ethics and Ethical Standards
for Anger Management Professionals presented by the National Anger
Management Association:
Ethical
Standards for Anger Management Professionals
The
following ethical standards are relevant to the work
related activities of all anger management professionals.
These standards concern (1) anger management professionals'
ethical responsibilities to clients, (2) anger management
professionals' ethical responsibilities to colleagues,
(3) anger management professionals' ethical responsibilities
in practice settings, (4) anger management professionals'
ethical responsibilities as professionals, (5) anger
management professionals' ethical responsibilities to
the Anger Management profession, and (6) anger
management professionals' ethical responsibilities to
the broader society.
Some
of the standards that follow are enforceable guidelines
for professional conduct, and some are inspirational.
The extent to which each standard is enforceable is
a matter of professional judgment to be exercised by
those responsible for reviewing alleged violations of
ethical standards.
1.
Anger management professionals' Ethical Responsibilities
to Clients
1.01
Commitment to Clients
Anger
management professionals' primary responsibility is
to promote the well-being of clients. In general, clients'
interests are primary. However, anger management professionals'
responsibility to the larger society or specific legal
obligations may on limited occasions supersede the loyalty
owed clients, and clients should be so advised. (Examples
include when a Anger Management professional is required
by law to report that a client has abused a child or
has threatened to harm self or others.)
1.02
Self-Determination
Anger
management professionals respect and promote the right
of clients to self-determination and assist clients
in their efforts to identify and clarify their goals.
Anger management professionals may limit clients' right
to self-determination when, in the anger management
professionals' professional judgment, clients' actions
or potential actions pose a serious, foreseeable, and
imminent risk to themselves or others.
1.03
Informed Consent
(a)
Anger management professionals should provide services
to clients only in the context of a professional relationship
based, when appropriate, on valid informed consent.
Anger management professionals should use clear and
understandable language to inform clients of the purpose
of the services, risks related to the services, limits
to services because of the requirements of a third-party
payer, relevant costs, reasonable alternatives, clients'
right to refuse or withdraw consent, and the time frame
covered by the consent. Anger management professionals
should provide clients with an opportunity to ask questions.
(b)
In instances when clients are not literate or have difficulty
understanding the primary language used in the practice
setting, anger management professionals should take
steps to ensure clients' comprehension. This may include
providing clients with a detailed verbal explanation
or arranging for a qualified interpreter or translator
whenever possible.
(c)
In instances when clients lack the capacity to provide
informed consent, anger management professionals should
protect clients' interests by seeking permission from
an appropriate third party, informing clients consistent
with the clients' level of understanding. In such instances
anger management professionals should seek to ensure
that the third party acts in a manner consistent with
clients' wishes and interests. Anger management professionals
should take reasonable steps to enhance such clients'
ability to give informed consent.
(d)
In instances when clients are receiving services involuntarily,
anger management professionals should provide information
about the nature and extent of services and about the
extent of clients' right to refuse service.
(e)
Anger management professionals who provide services
via electronic media (such as computer, telephone, radio,
and television) should inform recipients of the limitations
and risks associated with such services.
(f)
Anger management professionals should obtain clients'
informed consent before audiotaping or videotaping clients
or permitting observation of services to clients by
a third party.
1.04
Competence
(a)
Anger management professionals should provide services
and represent themselves as competent only within the
boundaries of their education, training, license, certification,
consultation received, supervised experience, or other
relevant professional experience.
(b)
Anger management professionals should provide services
in substantive areas or use intervention techniques
or approaches that are new to them only after engaging
in appropriate study, training, consultation, and supervision
from people who are competent in those interventions
or techniques.
(c)
When generally recognized standards do not exist with
respect to an emerging area of practice, anger management
professionals should exercise careful judgment and take
responsible steps (including appropriate education,
research, training, consultation, and supervision) to
ensure the competence of their work and to protect clients
from harm.
1.05
Cultural Competence and Social Diversity
(a)
Anger management professionals should understand culture
and its function in human behavior and society, recognizing
the strengths that exist in all cultures.
(b)
Anger management professionals should have a knowledge
base of their clients' cultures and be able to demonstrate
competence in the provision of services that are sensitive
to clients' cultures and to differences among people
and cultural groups.
(c)
Anger management professionals should obtain education
about and seek to understand the nature of social diversity
and oppression with respect to race, ethnicity, national
origin, color, sex, sexual orientation, age, marital
status, political belief, religion, and mental or physical
disability.
1.06
Conflicts of Interest
(a)
Anger management professionals should be alert to and
avoid conflicts of interest that interfere with the
exercise of professional discretion and impartial judgment.
Anger management professionals should inform clients
when a real or potential conflict of interest arises
and take reasonable steps to resolve the issue in a
manner that makes the clients' interests primary and
protects clients' interests to the greatest extent possible.
In some cases, protecting clients' interests may require
termination of the professional relationship with proper
referral of the client.
(b)
Anger management professionals should not take unfair
advantage of any professional relationship or exploit
others to further their personal, religious, political,
or business interests.
(c)
Anger management professionals should not engage in
dual or multiple relationships with clients or former
clients in which there is a risk of exploitation or
potential harm to the client. In instances when dual
or multiple relationships are unavoidable, anger management
professionals should take steps to protect clients and
are responsible for setting clear, appropriate, and
culturally sensitive boundaries. (Dual or multiple relationships
occur when anger management professionals relate to
clients in more than one relationship, whether professional,
social, or business. Dual or multiple relationships
can occur simultaneously or consecutively.)
(d)
When anger management professionals provide services
to two or more people who have a relationship with each
other (for example, couples, family members), anger
management professionals should clarify with all parties
which individuals will be considered clients and the
nature of anger management professionals' professional
obligations to the various individuals who are receiving
services. Anger management professionals who anticipate
a conflict of interest among the individuals receiving
services or who anticipate having to perform in potentially
conflicting roles (for example, when a Anger Management
er is asked to testify in a child custody dispute or
divorce proceedings involving clients) should clarify
their role with the parties involved and take appropriate
action to minimize any conflict of interest.
1.07
Privacy and Confidentiality
(a)
Anger management professionals should respect clients'
right to privacy. Anger management professionals should
not solicit private information from clients unless
it is essential to providing services or conducting
Anger Management evaluation or research. Once
private information is shared, standards of confidentiality
apply.
(b)
Anger management professionals may disclose confidential
information when appropriate with valid consent from
a client or a person legally authorized to consent on
behalf of a client.
(c)
Anger management professionals should protect the confidentiality
of all information obtained in the course of professional
service, except for compelling professional reasons.
The general expectation that anger management professionals
will keep information confidential does not apply when
disclosure is necessary to prevent serious, foreseeable,
and imminent harm to a client or other identifiable
person. In all instances, anger management professionals
should disclose the least amount of confidential information
necessary to achieve the desired purpose; only information
that is directly relevant to the purpose for which the
disclosure is made should be revealed.
(d)
Anger management professionals should inform clients,
to the extent possible, about the disclosure of confidential
information and the potential consequences, when feasible
before the disclosure is made. This applies whether
anger management professionals disclose confidential
information on the basis of a legal requirement or client
consent.
(e)
Anger management professionals should discuss with clients
and other interested parties the nature of confidentiality
and limitations of clients' right to confidentiality.
Anger management professionals should review with clients
circumstances where confidential information may be
requested and where disclosure of confidential information
may be legally required. This discussion should occur
as soon as possible in the Anger Management professional-client
relationship and as needed throughout the course of
the relationship.
(f)
When anger management professionals provide counseling
services to families, couples, or groups, anger management
professionals should seek agreement among the parties
involved concerning each individual's right to confidentiality
and obligation to preserve the confidentiality of information
shared by others. Anger management professionals should
inform participants in family, couples, or group counseling
that anger management professionals cannot guarantee
that all participants will honor such agreements.
(g)
Anger management professionals should inform clients
involved in family, couples, marital, or group counseling
of the Anger Management professional's, employer's,
and agency's policy concerning the Anger Management
professional's disclosure of confidential information
among the parties involved in the counseling.
(h)
Anger management professionals should not disclose confidential
information to third-party payers unless clients have
authorized such disclosure.
(i)
Anger management professionals should not discuss confidential
information in any setting unless privacy can be ensured.
Anger management professionals should not discuss confidential
information in public or semipublic areas such as hallways,
waiting rooms, elevators, and restaurants.
(j)
Anger management professionals should protect the confidentiality
of clients during legal proceedings to the extent permitted
by law. When a court of law or other legally authorized
body orders anger management professionals to disclose
confidential or privileged information without a client's
consent and such disclosure could cause harm to the
client, anger management professionals should request
that the court withdraw the order or limit the order
as narrowly as possible or maintain the records under
seal, unavailable for public inspection.
(k)
Anger management professionals should protect the confidentiality
of clients when responding to requests from members
of the media.
(l)
Anger management professionals should protect the confidentiality
of clients' written and electronic records and other
sensitive information. Anger management professionals
should take reasonable steps to ensure that clients'
records are stored in a secure location and that clients'
records are not available to others who are not authorized
to have access.
(m)
Anger management professionals should take precautions
to ensure and maintain the confidentiality of information
transmitted to other parties through the use of computers,
electronic mail, facsimile machines, telephones and
telephone answering machines, and other electronic or
computer technology. Disclosure of identifying information
should be avoided whenever possible.
(n)
Anger management professionals should transfer or dispose
of clients' records in a manner that protects clients'
confidentiality and is consistent with state statutes
governing records and Anger Management licensure.
(o)
Anger management professionals should take reasonable
precautions to protect client confidentiality in the
event of the Anger Management professional's termination
of practice, incapacitation, or death.
(p)
Anger management professionals should not disclose identifying
information when discussing clients for teaching or
training purposes unless the client has consented to
disclosure of confidential information.
(q)
Anger management professionals should not disclose identifying
information when discussing clients with consultants
unless the client has consented to disclosure of confidential
information or there is a compelling need for such disclosure.
(r)
Anger management professionals should protect the confidentiality
of deceased clients consistent with the preceding standards.
1.08
Access to Records
(a)
Anger management professionals should provide clients
with reasonable access to records concerning the clients.
Anger management professionals who are concerned that
clients' access to their records could cause serious
misunderstanding or harm to the client should provide
assistance in interpreting the records and consultation
with the client regarding the records. Anger management
professionals should limit clients' access to their
records, or portions of their records, only in exceptional
circumstances when there is compelling evidence that
such access would cause serious harm to the client.
Both clients' requests and the rationale for withholding
some or all of the record should be documented in clients'
files.
(b)
When providing clients with access to their records,
anger management professionals should take steps to
protect the confidentiality of other individuals identified
or discussed in such records.
1.09
Sexual Relationships
(a)
Anger management professionals should under no circumstances
engage in sexual activities or sexual contact with current
clients, whether such contact is consensual or forced.
(b)
Anger management professionals should not engage in
sexual activities or sexual contact with clients' relatives
or other individuals with whom clients maintain a close
personal relationship when there is a risk of exploitation
or potential harm to the client. Sexual activity or
sexual contact with clients' relatives or other individuals
with whom clients maintain a personal relationship has
the potential to be harmful to the client and may make
it difficult for the Anger Management professional and
client to maintain appropriate professional boundaries.
Anger management professionals--not their clients, their
clients' relatives, or other individuals with whom the
client maintains a personal relationship--assume the
full burden for setting clear, appropriate, and culturally
sensitive boundaries.
(c)
Anger management professionals should not engage in
sexual activities or sexual contact with former clients
because of the potential for harm to the client. If
anger management professionals engage in conduct contrary
to this prohibition or claim that an exception to this
prohibition is warranted because of extraordinary circumstances,
it is anger management professionals--not their clients--who
assume the full burden of demonstrating that the former
client has not been exploited, coerced, or manipulated,
intentionally or unintentionally.
(d)
Anger management professionals should not provide clinical
services to individuals with whom they have had a prior
sexual relationship. Providing clinical services to
a former sexual partner has the potential to be harmful
to the individual and is likely to make it difficult
for the Anger Management professional and individual
to maintain appropriate professional boundaries.
1.10
Physical Contact
Anger
management professionals should not engage in physical
contact with clients when there is a possibility of
psychological harm to the client as a result of the
contact (such as cradling or caressing clients). Anger
management professionals who engage in appropriate physical
contact with clients are responsible for setting clear,
appropriate, and culturally sensitive boundaries that
govern such physical contact.
1.11
Sexual Harassment
Anger
management professionals should not sexually harass
clients. Sexual harassment includes sexual advances,
sexual solicitation, requests for sexual favors, and
other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature.
1.12
Derogatory Language
Anger
management professionals should not use derogatory language
in their written or verbal communications to or about
clients. Anger management professionals should use accurate
and respectful language in all communications to and
about clients.
1.13
Payment for Services
(a)
When setting fees, anger management professionals should
ensure that the fees are fair, reasonable, and commensurate
with the services performed. Consideration should be
given to clients' ability to pay.
(b)
Anger management professionals should avoid accepting
goods or services from clients as payment for professional
services. Bartering arrangements, particularly involving
services, create the potential for conflicts of interest,
exploitation, and inappropriate boundaries in anger
management professionals' relationships with clients.
Anger management professionals should explore and may
participate in bartering only in very limited circumstances
when it can be demonstrated that such arrangements are
an accepted practice among professionals in the local
community, considered to be essential for the provision
of services, negotiated without coercion, and entered
into at the client's initiative and with the client's
informed consent. Anger management professionals who
accept goods or services from clients as payment for
professional services assume the full burden of demonstrating
that this arrangement will not be detrimental to the
client or the professional relationship.
(c)
Anger management professionals should not solicit a
private fee or other remuneration for providing services
to clients who are entitled to such available services
through the anger management professionals' employer
or agency.
1.14
Clients Who Lack Decision-Making Capacity
When
anger management professionals act on behalf of clients
who lack the capacity to make informed decisions, anger
management professionals should take reasonable steps
to safeguard the interests and rights of those clients.
1.15
Interruption of Services
Anger
management professionals should make reasonable efforts
to ensure continuity of services in the event that services
are interrupted by factors such as unavailability, relocation,
illness, disability, or death.
1.16
Termination of Services
(a)
Anger management professionals should terminate services
to clients and professional relationships with them
when such services and relationships are no longer required
or no longer serve the clients' needs or interests.
(b)
Anger management professionals should take reasonable
steps to avoid abandoning clients who are still in need
of services. Anger management professionals should withdraw
services precipitously only under unusual circumstances,
giving careful consideration to all factors in the situation
and taking care to minimize possible adverse effects.
Anger management professionals should assist in making
appropriate arrangements for continuation of services
when necessary.
(c)
Anger management professionals in fee-for-service settings
may terminate services to clients who are not paying
an overdue balance if the financial contractual arrangements
have been made clear to the client, if the client does
not pose an imminent danger to self or others, and if
the clinical and other consequences of the current nonpayment
have been addressed and discussed with the client.
(d)
Anger management professionals should not terminate
services to pursue a social, financial, or sexual relationship
with a client.
(e)
Anger management professionals who anticipate the termination
or interruption of services to clients should notify
clients promptly and seek the transfer, referral, or
continuation of services in relation to the clients'
needs and preferences.
(f)
Anger management professionals who are leaving an employment
setting should inform clients of appropriate options
for the continuation of services and of the benefits
and risks of the options.
2.
Anger management professionals' Ethical Responsibilities
to Colleagues
2.01
Respect
(a)
Anger management professionals should treat colleagues
with respect and should represent accurately and fairly
the qualifications, views, and obligations of colleagues.
(b)
Anger management professionals should avoid unwarranted
negative criticism of colleagues in communications with
clients or with other professionals. Unwarranted negative
criticism may include demeaning comments that refer
to colleagues' level of competence or to individuals'
attributes such as race, ethnicity, national origin,
color, sex, sexual orientation, age, marital status,
political belief, religion, and mental or physical disability.
(c)
Anger management professionals should cooperate with
Anger Management colleagues and with colleagues
of other professions when such cooperation serves the
well-being of clients.
2.02
Confidentiality
Anger
management professionals should respect confidential
information shared by colleagues in the course of their
professional relationships and transactions. Anger management
professionals should ensure that such colleagues understand
anger management professionals' obligation to respect
confidentiality and any exceptions related to it.
2.03
Interdisciplinary Collaboration
(a)
Anger management professionals who are members of an
interdisciplinary team should participate in and contribute
to decisions that affect the well-being of clients by
drawing on the perspectives, values, and experiences
of the Anger Management profession. Professional
and ethical obligations of the interdisciplinary team
as a whole and of its individual members should be clearly
established.
(b)
Anger management professionals for whom a team decision
raises ethical concerns should attempt to resolve the
disagreement through appropriate channels. If the disagreement
cannot be resolved, anger management professionals should
pursue other avenues to address their concerns consistent
with client well-being.
2.04
Disputes Involving Colleagues
(a)
Anger management professionals should not take advantage
of a dispute between a colleague and an employer to
obtain a position or otherwise advance the anger management
professionals' own interests.
(b)
Anger management professionals should not exploit clients
in disputes with colleagues or engage clients in any
inappropriate discussion of conflicts between anger
management professionals and their colleagues.
2.05
Consultation
(a)
Anger management professionals should seek the advice
and counsel of colleagues whenever such consultation
is in the best interests of clients.
(b)
Anger management professionals should keep themselves
informed about colleagues' areas of expertise and competencies.
Anger management professionals should seek consultation
only from colleagues who have demonstrated knowledge,
expertise, and competence related to the subject of
the consultation.
(c)
When consulting with colleagues about clients, anger
management professionals should disclose the least amount
of information necessary to achieve the purposes of
the consultation.
2.06
Referral for Services
(a)
Anger management professionals should refer clients
to other professionals when the other professionals'
specialized knowledge or expertise is needed to serve
clients fully or when anger management professionals
believe that they are not being effective or making
reasonable progress with clients and that additional
service is required.
(b)
Anger management professionals who refer clients to
other professionals should take appropriate steps to
facilitate an orderly transfer of responsibility. Anger
management professionals who refer clients to other
professionals should disclose, with clients' consent,
all pertinent information to the new service providers.
(c)
Anger management professionals are prohibited from giving
or receiving payment for a referral when no professional
service is provided by the referring Anger Management
professional.
2.07
Sexual Relationships
(a)
Anger management professionals who function as supervisors
or educators should not engage in sexual activities
or contact with supervisees, students, trainees, or
other colleagues over whom they exercise professional
authority.
(b)
Anger management professionals should avoid engaging
in sexual relationships with colleagues when there is
potential for a conflict of interest. Anger management
professionals who become involved in, or anticipate
becoming involved in, a sexual relationship with a colleague
have a duty to transfer professional responsibilities,
when necessary, to avoid a conflict of interest.
2.08
Sexual Harassment
Anger
management professionals should not sexually harass
supervisees, students, trainees, or colleagues. Sexual
harassment includes sexual advances, sexual solicitation,
requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical
conduct of a sexual nature.
2.09
Impairment of Colleagues
(a)
Anger management professionals who have direct knowledge
of a Anger Management colleague's impairment that
is due to personal problems, psychosocial distress,
substance abuse, or mental health difficulties and that
interferes with practice effectiveness should consult
with that colleague when feasible and assist the colleague
in taking remedial action.
(b)
Anger management professionals who believe that a Anger
Management colleague's impairment interferes with
practice effectiveness and that the colleague has not
taken adequate steps to address the impairment should
take action through appropriate channels established
by employers, agencies, NAMA, licensing and regulatory
bodies, and other professional organizations.
2.10
Incompetence of Colleagues
(a)
Anger management professionals who have direct knowledge
of a Anger Management colleague's incompetence
should consult with that colleague when feasible and
assist the colleague in taking remedial action.
(b)
Anger management professionals who believe that a Anger
Management colleague is incompetent and has not
taken adequate steps to address the incompetence should
take action through appropriate channels established
by employers, agencies, NAMA, licensing and regulatory
bodies, and other professional organizations.
2.11
Unethical Conduct of Colleagues
(a)
Anger management professionals should take adequate
measures to discourage, prevent, expose, and correct
the unethical conduct of colleagues.
(b)
Anger management professionals should be knowledgeable
about established policies and procedures for handling
concerns about colleagues' unethical behavior. Anger
management professionals should be familiar with national,
state, and local procedures for handling ethics complaints.
These include policies and procedures created by NAMA,
licensing and regulatory bodies, employers, agencies,
and other professional organizations.
(c)
Anger management professionals who believe that a colleague
has acted unethically should seek resolution by discussing
their concerns with the colleague when feasible and
when such discussion is likely to be productive.
(d)
When necessary, anger management professionals who believe
that a colleague has acted unethically should take action
through appropriate formal channels (such as contacting
a state licensing board or regulatory body, an NAMA
committee on inquiry, or other professional ethics committees).
(e)
Anger management professionals should defend and assist
colleagues who are unjustly charged with unethical conduct.
3.
Anger management professionals' Ethical Responsibilities
in Practice Settings
3.01
Supervision and Consultation
(a)
Anger management professionals who provide supervision
or consultation should have the necessary knowledge
and skill to supervise or consult appropriately and
should do so only within their areas of knowledge and
competence.
(b)
Anger management professionals who provide supervision
or consultation are responsible for setting clear, appropriate,
and culturally sensitive boundaries.
(c)
Anger management professionals should not engage in
any dual or multiple relationships with supervisees
in which there is a risk of exploitation of or potential
harm to the supervisee.
(d)
Anger management professionals who provide supervision
should evaluate supervisees' performance in a manner
that is fair and respectful.
3.02
Education and Training
(a)
Anger management professionals who function as educators,
field instructors for students, or trainers should provide
instruction only within their areas of knowledge and
competence and should provide instruction based on the
most current information and knowledge available in
the profession.
(b)
Anger management professionals who function as educators
or field instructors for students should evaluate students'
performance in a manner that is fair and respectful.
(c)
Anger management professionals who function as educators
or field instructors for students should take reasonable
steps to ensure that clients are routinely informed
when services are being provided by students.
(d)
Anger management professionals who function as educators
or field instructors for students should not engage
in any dual or multiple relationships with students
in which there is a risk of exploitation or potential
harm to the student. Anger Management educators
and field instructors are responsible for setting clear,
appropriate, and culturally sensitive boundaries.
3.03
Performance Evaluation
Anger
management professionals who have responsibility for
evaluating the performance of others should fulfill
such responsibility in a fair and considerate manner
and on the basis of clearly stated criteria.
3.04
Client Records
(a)
Anger management professionals should take reasonable
steps to ensure that documentation in records is accurate
and reflects the services provided.
(b)
Anger management professionals should include sufficient
and timely documentation in records to facilitate the
delivery of services and to ensure continuity of services
provided to clients in the future.
(c)
Anger management professionals' documentation should
protect clients' privacy to the extent that is possible
and appropriate and should include only information
that is directly relevant to the delivery of services.
(d)
Anger management professionals should store records
following the termination of services to ensure reasonable
future access. Records should be maintained for the
number of years required by state statutes or relevant
contracts.
3.05
Billing
Anger
management professionals should establish and maintain
billing practices that accurately reflect the nature
and extent of services provided and that identify who
provided the service in the practice setting.
3.06
Client Transfer
(a)
When an individual who is receiving services from another
agency or colleague contacts a Anger Management professional
for services, the Anger Management professional should
carefully consider the client's needs before agreeing
to provide services. To minimize possible confusion
and conflict, anger management professionals should
discuss with potential clients the nature of the clients'
current relationship with other service providers and
the implications, including possible benefits or risks,
of entering into a relationship with a new service provider.
(b)
If a new client has been served by another agency or
colleague, anger management professionals should discuss
with the client whether consultation with the previous
service provider is in the client's best interest.
3.07
Administration
(a)
Anger Management administrators should advocate
within and outside their agencies for adequate resources
to meet clients' needs.
(b)
Anger management professionals should advocate for resource
allocation procedures that are open and fair. When not
all clients' needs can be met, an allocation procedure
should be developed that is nondiscriminatory and based
on appropriate and consistently applied principles.
(c)
Anger management professionals who are administrators
should take reasonable steps to ensure that adequate
agency or organizational resources are available to
provide appropriate staff supervision.
(d)
Anger Management administrators should take reasonable
steps to ensure that the working environment for which
they are responsible is consistent with and encourages
compliance with the NAMA Code of Ethics. Anger Management
administrators should take reasonable steps to eliminate
any conditions in their organizations that violate,
interfere with, or discourage compliance with the Code.
3.08
Continuing Education and Staff Development
Anger
Management administrators and supervisors should
take reasonable steps to provide or arrange for continuing
education and staff development for all staff for whom
they are responsible. Continuing education and staff
development should address current knowledge and emerging
developments related to Anger Management practice
and ethics.
3.09
Commitments to Employers
(a)
Anger management professionals generally should adhere
to commitments made to employers and employing organizations.
(b)
Anger management professionals should work to improve
employing agencies' policies and procedures and the
efficiency and effectiveness of their services.
(c)
Anger management professionals should take reasonable
steps to ensure that employers are aware of anger management
professionals' ethical obligations as set forth in the
NAMA Code of Ethics and of the implications of those
obligations for Anger Management practice.
(d)
Anger management professionals should not allow an employing
organization's policies, procedures, regulations, or
administrative orders to interfere with their ethical
practice of Anger Management . Anger management professionals
should take reasonable steps to ensure that their employing
organizations' practices are consistent with the NAMA
Code of Ethics.
(e)
Anger management professionals should act to prevent
and eliminate discrimination in the employing organization's
work assignments and in its employment policies and
practices.
(f)
Anger management professionals should accept employment
or arrange student field placements only in organizations
that exercise fair personnel practices.
(g)
Anger management professionals should be diligent stewards
of the resources of their employing organizations, wisely
conserving funds where appropriate and never misappropriating
funds or using them for unintended purposes.
3.10
Labor-Management Disputes
(a)
Anger management professionals may engage in organized
action, including the formation of and participation
in labor unions, to improve services to clients and
working conditions.
(b)
The actions of anger management professionals who are
involved in labor-management disputes, job actions,
or labor strikes should be guided by the profession's
values, ethical principles, and ethical standards. Reasonable
differences of opinion exist among anger management
professionals concerning their primary obligation as
professionals during an actual or threatened labor strike
or job action. Anger management professionals should
carefully examine relevant issues and their possible
impact on clients before deciding on a course of action.
4.
Anger management professionals' Ethical Responsibilities
as Professionals
4.01
Competence
(a)
Anger management professionals should accept responsibility
or employment only on the basis of existing competence
or the intention to acquire the necessary competence.
(b)
Anger management professionals should strive to become
and remain proficient in professional practice and the
performance of professional functions. Anger management
professionals should critically examine and keep current
with emerging knowledge relevant to Anger Management
. Anger management professionals should routinely review
the professional literature and participate in continuing
education relevant to Anger Management practice
and Anger Management ethics.
(c)
Anger management professionals should base practice
on recognized knowledge, including empirically based
knowledge, relevant to Anger Management and Anger
Management ethics.
4.02
Discrimination
Anger
management professionals should not practice, condone,
facilitate, or collaborate with any form of discrimination
on the basis of race, ethnicity, national origin, color,
sex, sexual orientation, age, marital status, political
belief, religion, or mental or physical disability.
4.03
Private Conduct
Anger
management professionals should not permit their private
conduct to interfere with their ability to fulfill their
professional responsibilities.
4.04
Dishonesty, Fraud, and Deception
Anger
management professionals should not participate in,
condone, or be associated with dishonesty, fraud, or
deception.
4.05
Impairment
(a)
Anger management professionals should not allow their
own personal problems, psychosocial distress, legal
problems, substance abuse, or mental health difficulties
to interfere with their professional judgment and performance
or to jeopardize the best interests of people for whom
they have a professional responsibility.
(b)
Anger management professionals whose personal problems,
psychosocial distress, legal problems, substance abuse,
or mental health difficulties interfere with their professional
judgment and performance should immediately seek consultation
and take appropriate remedial action by seeking professional
help, making adjustments in workload, terminating practice,
or taking any other steps necessary to protect clients
and others.
4.06
Misrepresentation
(a)
Anger management professionals should make clear distinctions
between statements made and actions engaged in as a
private individual and as a representative of the Anger
Management profession, a professional Anger Management
organization, or the Anger Management professional's
employing agency.
(b)
Anger management professionals who speak on behalf of
professional Anger Management organizations should
accurately represent the official and authorized positions
of the organizations.
(c)
Anger management professionals should ensure that their
representations to clients, agencies, and the public
of professional qualifications, credentials, education,
competence, affiliations, services provided, or results
to be achieved are accurate. Anger management professionals
should claim only those relevant professional credentials
they actually possess and take steps to correct any
inaccuracies or misrepresentations of their credentials
by others.
4.07
Solicitations
(a)
Anger management professionals should not engage in
uninvited solicitation of potential clients who, because
of their circumstances, are vulnerable to undue influence,
manipulation, or coercion.
(b)
Anger management professionals should not engage in
solicitation of testimonial endorsements (including
solicitation of consent to use a client's prior statement
as a testimonial endorsement) from current clients or
from other people who, because of their particular circumstances,
are vulnerable to undue influence.
4.08
Acknowledging Credit
(a)
Anger management professionals should take responsibility
and credit, including authorship credit, only for work
they have actually performed and to which they have
contributed.
(b)
Anger management professionals should honestly acknowledge
the work of and the contributions made by others.
5.
Anger management professionals' Ethical Responsibilities
to the Anger Management Profession
5.01
Integrity of the Profession
(a)
Anger management professionals should work toward the
maintenance and promotion of high standards of practice.
(b)
Anger management professionals should uphold and advance
the values, ethics, knowledge, and mission of the profession.
Anger management professionals should protect, enhance,
and improve the integrity of the profession through
appropriate study and research, active discussion, and
responsible criticism of the profession.
(c)
Anger management professionals should contribute time
and professional expertise to activities that promote
respect for the value, integrity, and competence of
the Anger Management profession. These activities
may include teaching, research, consultation, service,
legislative testimony, presentations in the community,
and participation in their professional organizations.
(d)
Anger management professionals should contribute to
the knowledge base of Anger Management and share
with colleagues their knowledge related to practice,
research, and ethics. Anger management professionals
should seek to con-tribute to the profession's literature
and to share their knowledge at professional meetings
and conferences.
(e)
Anger management professionals should act to prevent
the unauthorized and unqualified practice of Anger Management
.
5.02
Evaluation and Research
(a)
Anger management professionals should monitor and evaluate
policies, the implementation of programs, and practice
interventions.
(b)
Anger management professionals should promote and facilitate
evaluation and research to contribute to the development
of knowledge.
(c)
Anger management professionals should critically examine
and keep current with emerging knowledge relevant to
Anger Management and fully use evaluation and
research evidence in their professional practice.
(d)
Anger management professionals engaged in evaluation
or research should carefully consider possible consequences
and should follow guidelines developed for the protection
of evaluation and research participants. Appropriate
institutional review boards should be consulted.
(e)
Anger management professionals engaged in evaluation
or research should obtain voluntary and written informed
consent from participants, when appropriate, without
any implied or actual deprivation or penalty for refusal
to participate; without undue inducement to participate;
and with due regard for participants' well-being, privacy,
and dignity. Informed consent should include information
about the nature, extent, and duration of the participation
requested and disclosure of the risks and benefits of
participation in the research.
(f)
When evaluation or research participants are incapable
of giving informed consent, anger management professionals
should provide an appropriate explanation to the participants,
obtain the participants' assent to the extent they are
able, and obtain written consent from an appropriate
proxy.
(g)
Anger management professionals should never design or
conduct evaluation or research that does not use consent
procedures, such as certain forms of naturalistic observation
and archival research, unless rigorous and responsible
review of the research has found it to be justified
because of its prospective scientific, educational,
or applied value and unless equally effective alternative
procedures that do not involve waiver of consent are
not feasible.
(h)
Anger management professionals should inform participants
of their right to withdraw from evaluation and research
at any time without penalty.
(i)
Anger management professionals should take appropriate
steps to ensure that participants in evaluation and
research have access to appropriate supportive services.
(j)
Anger management professionals engaged in evaluation
or research should protect participants from unwarranted
physical or mental distress, harm, danger, or deprivation.
(k)
Anger management professionals engaged in the evaluation
of services should discuss collected information only
for professional purposes and only with people professionally
concerned with this information.
(l)
Anger management professionals engaged in evaluation
or research should ensure the anonymity or confidentiality
of participants and of the data obtained from them.
Anger management professionals should inform participants
of any limits of confidentiality, the measures that
will be taken to ensure confidentiality, and when any
records containing research data will be destroyed.
(m)
Anger management professionals who report evaluation
and research results should protect participants' confidentiality
by omitting identifying information unless proper consent
has been obtained authorizing disclosure.
(n)
Anger management professionals should report evaluation
and research findings accurately. They should not fabricate
or falsify results and should take steps to correct
any errors later found in published data using standard
publication methods.
(o)
Anger management professionals engaged in evaluation
or research should be alert to and avoid conflicts of
interest and dual relationships with participants, should
inform participants when a real or potential conflict
of interest arises, and should take steps to resolve
the issue in a manner that makes participants' interests
primary.
(p)
Anger management professionals should educate themselves,
their students, and their colleagues about responsible
research practices.
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2009
Anger Management Training Institute
All rights are reserved.
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