Tarasoff Revisited
Ethics vs. Liability
Texas Reality Check
You Are The Counselor
100

This was the critical action the therapist failed to take in Tarasoff, leading to the court’s ruling.
A. Hospitalize client
B. Warn the identifiable victim
C. Terminate therapy
D. Document session

What is warning the identifiable victim?

100

This concept determines whether a counselor is ethically or legally at risk after failing to act on a client’s threat.
A. Client outcome alone
B. Standard of care and foreseeability
C. Personal values
D. Length of therapy

What is the standard of care and foreseeability?

100

This is the accurate statement about Texas law regarding duty to warn in all situations.
A. Always required
B. Never allowed
C. Always mirrors Tarasoff
D. Not always required

What is it is not always required?

100

This is the FIRST step when a client expresses vague thoughts about harming someone.
A. Warn the victim
B. Call police
C. Assess risk and gather more information
D. Terminate client

What is assessing risk and gathering more information?

200

This broader concept, rather than simply “warning,” more accurately reflects the responsibility established by Tarasoff.
A. Duty to report
B. Duty to refer
C. Duty to protect
D. Duty to diagnose

What is duty to protect?

200

This is the central ethical conflict in duty to warn situations.
A. Diagnosis vs treatment
B. Autonomy vs billing
C. Confidentiality vs protection from harm
D. Supervision vs independence

What is confidentiality versus protection from harm?

200

This was the key takeaway from Thapar v. Zezulka regarding duty to warn.
A. Always required
B. Identical to Tarasoff
C. More limited and context-dependent
D. Only applies to minors

What is it is more limited and context-dependent?

200

This factor becomes most important when a client identifies a specific target but denies intent.
A. Immediate warning
B. Ignoring unless repeated
C. Assessing seriousness, intent, and imminence
D. Ending therapy

What is assessing seriousness, intent, and imminence?

300

These two elements must generally be present to strongly consider breaching confidentiality in Tarasoff-type situations.
A. Emotional distress + past trauma
B. Vague anger + no plan
C. Serious threat + identifiable victim
D. Family conflict + stress

What is a serious threat and an identifiable (foreseeable) victim?

300

This ethical violation occurs when a counselor breaks confidentiality without sufficient justification of risk.
A. Malpractice
B. Countertransference
C. Unjustified breach of confidentiality
D. Lack of empathy

What is an unjustified breach of confidentiality?

300

In Texas, this becomes most critical when deciding whether to break confidentiality in a threat situation.
A. Client preference
B. Counselor intuition alone
C. Clinical judgment, consultation, and documentation
D. Avoiding liability at all costs

What is clinical judgment, consultation, and documentation?

300

This is the best next step when a counselor is unsure whether a threat meets the threshold for action.
A. Do nothing
B. Immediately report
C. Seek consultation and document decision-making
D. Refer client out

What is seeking consultation and documenting the decision-making process?