Professional Standards
Privacy Protocols
The Informed Client
Minors & Transitions
Conduct & Clinical Limits
100

 This quality encompasses the behaviors and qualities that mark an individual as a reliable, competent, trustworthy, and polished professional.

What is professionalism? (CH 7)

100

This 1996 federal act establishes national standards for electronic healthcare transactions and data privacy.

What is HIPAA? (CH 7)

100

To eliminate misunderstandings about finances and expectations, practitioners should have clients sign this form before the first session.

What is a Client Agreement Form (or Policy Statement)? (CH 7)

100

This specific term describes the collective group of adults, including parents and practitioners, responsible for a minor's welfare.

What is the therapeutic constellation? (CH 7)

100

To respect a client's schedule and maintain professional standards, a practitioner must excel in this specific skill to ensure sessions begin and end exactly as promised.

What is time management? (CH 7)

200

This is the first and most foundational key factor in determining a practitioner's scope of practice.

What is the Law? (CH 7)

200

Under HIPAA, this specific type of data—which includes health history and identifying details—must be protected with strict privacy standards.

What is Protected Health Information (or PHI)? (CH 7)

200

According to ethical guidelines, a practitioner should explicitly inform a client whenever they are moving to work on these.

What are vulnerable areas? (CH 7)

200

This unethical act occurs if a practitioner ends a professional relationship without providing a referral or ensuring continuity of care.

What is abandonment? (CH 7)

200

When educating a client about their condition, practitioners are ethically advised to state facts in this specific manner to avoid the appearance of prescribing or diagnosing.

What is a generic manner? (CH 7)

300

While diagnosis identifies an underlying cause, this is the term for a systematic approach to gathering information on a client’s condition.

What is assessment? (CH 7)

300

This form must be presented to every client to explain how their information is used and the procedure for them to obtain copies of their files.

What is a Notice of Privacy Policies? (CH 7)

300

 A practitioner must obtain this before varying from a previously agreed-upon treatment plan.

What is permission (or consent)? (CH 7)

300

A full practice, an inability to help, or the presence of countertransference are all ethical reasons for a practitioner to do this.

What is choosing not to work with a client? (CH 7)

300

Major stress, poor organization, and a lack of contingency plans are all behavioral indicators that a professional has become this.

What is an at-risk practitioner? (CH 7)

400

These are the four regulatory methods used by governments and professional organizations to establish field standards.

What are licensure, certification, registration, and title protection? (CH 7)

400

Practitioners are legally and ethically obligated to break confidentiality in these two specific circumstances.

What is when there is an imminent danger to the client or to others? (CH 7)

400

This must be provided several minutes before a treatment ends to allow the client to request attention for a final area.

What is notification that the session is nearing completion? (CH 7)

400

Before referring a client to an unfamiliar practitioner, an ethical practitioner should take this step to ensure the quality of work.

What is receiving a treatment from them personally? (CH 7)

400

As part of the "Personalizing Scope Checklist," practitioners are encouraged to take this specific step regarding modalities or techniques they have not used or studied in a long time.

What is retiring old techniques and modalities? (CH 7)

500

A practitioner is legally licensed for a modality but hasn't performed it in a decade. Why is performing it today considered an ethical breach of scope?

Because they have lost competency, which is a subjective but essential pillar of scope alongside legal and educational requirements.

500

Why is a practitioner still liable for a HIPAA violation if they discuss a client’s case with a colleague in a hallway where others might overhear?

Because HIPAA requires a process to handle PHI that prevents unauthorized disclosure to anyone not directly involved in client care.

500

Why is a client’s silence during a painful technique not the same as informed consent?

Because the practitioner has a duty to invite input and check for tolerability, rather than assuming a lack of verbal protest equals consent. (CH 7)

500

A parent demands you treat their child despite the child clearly being uncomfortable. Why is following the parent's order an ethical risk?

Because all adults in the therapeutic constellation share responsibility for the child's welfare, and the child's stage of development and goals must be prioritized over a parent's whim.

500

A long-term client asks you to recommend a specific dosage of a supplement for their back pain. Why is providing a specific recommendation ethically problematic, even if you know from personal experience that the supplement works?

Because providing a specific dosage constitutes prescribing, which is outside a somatic therapist's scope of practice; ethically, the practitioner should refer to published clinical studies or state facts generically to allow the client to make their own informed decision. (CH 7)

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