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Legal, Ethical, and Professional Issues in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy |
Intro
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AMHA
— USA, the
National Coalition of Mental Health Professionals and Consumers and the
Academy for the Study of the Psychoanalytic Arts invite you to join us
in a petition campaign about confidentiality. Client
privacy is fundamental for fostering trust in therapy. In August 2002,
the “Privacy Standards” of HIPAA eliminated the need for
clients’ consent the Federal level to release information that
traditionally required patients’ permission. Now, legislative moves
to conform state laws to HIPAA are on fast track to passage in some
states. Further undermining privacy, corporate health care institutions
increasingly demand that records be presented for third party review. To
prevent more deterioration of client rights, we are circulating the Licensed
Psychotherapists Petition on Confidentiality. This
petition campaign is one step toward a “registry” of professional
opinion--a strategy to reclaim the healing arts as a collaborative
endeavor of professionals and the culture, rather than letting
corporations define healing modalities! We
are not petitioning anyone or any institution at this time. All
petition signers are placed in a registry on the web open for all to
view. As elaborated below, the registry uses the legal principle, of
“respectable minority”, as a basis for affirming practice standards
endorsed by a community of educated therapists rather than imposed by
the legal and legislative forces of managed care, insurance, and
pharmaceutical companies. THE
FIRST PROFESSIONAL PRIVACY PETITION In
2000, the Colorado Board of Psychological Examiners proposed that all
licensed psychologists necessarily give every client a diagnosis and
keep records in a manner reviewable by third parties. An
ad hoc committee of psychologists in Colorado mailed a petition
challenging such requirements. Over 27 % of all Licensed
Psychologists in Colorado signed and returned that petition approving
a standard allowing that in many circumstances clients may wisely
request that no notes be recorded and/or no diagnosis be made. Was
that over reactive or too radical? Not according to the American
Psychiatric Association’s resource paper on “Documentation of
Psychotherapy by Psychiatrists”, revised in response to HIPAA in March
2002. In “suggested format” for “variations in documentation
procedures”, this APA document flatly states that proper documentation
“may include a patient’s request or the clinician’s judgment that
there be no identifiable documentation” (p 3). The APA’s action and
the Colorado psychologists’ work have important implications for how
privacy of therapy is legally defined in this era when psychotherapy is
packaged as a commodity. For
a moment, consider the healing arts as an archetypal activity as much as
art, star gazing, or tool making. From this perspective, the healing
arts rest on a collective inheritance. Aside from the intuitive
appeal of such arguments, mountains of anthropological data detail
healing knowledge as a central feature of human activity across
cultures. There are also explicit legal precedents. In a 1996
decision, the US Supreme Court guarded the confidentiality of one person
to protect the functioning of the “institution” of
psychotherapy because “the mental health of our citizenry, no less
than its physical health, is a public good of transcendent
importance”. The
Expropriation of the Commons in the Medical and Psychotherapy
Fields There
are hundreds of troubling examples of incursions into the commons. Some
argue that the profit motive drives research. But a number of studies
demonstrate that drug companies’ primary contribution [vii] is
marketing billed as research and development! In some cases, drug
companies merely buy patent rights at very low cost from work done under
government grants at public universities. Damage to the commons comes
via control over research, quality control standards, political dealing,
etc. Though medical research rests on centuries of shared knowledge, universities
and research companies now sign contracts reserving industry’s rights
to refuse publication or prevent sharing of materials with others
[viii]. Legal reprisals draw the boundaries. Up to 25% of
researchers avoided areas of research out of fear of lawsuits [ix]. In
one instance, the New Zealand Health Department and the British Medical
Association’s journal delayed action in fear of a drug company’s
legal threats while an asthma drug continued to cause deaths [x]. Most
HMOs abide by accreditation standards set by the National Committee on
Quality Assurance [NCQA]. Though officially non-profit, the NCQA is
sponsored and run by representatives of major corporations’. Six of
those companies also sat on the intellectual property rights committee
of the World Trade Organization in 2000. The NCQA deals precisely in
intellectual property--”performance measurements”, “behavioral
health” conventions, etc. in which those corporations have enormous
investments. Further
down the food chain, insurers send bulletins to therapists mandating how
therapy should be done according to the NCQA [xi] or they simply assume
authority and decree treatment protocols. In a set of guidelines for
record keeping, a recent insurance company bulletin stated: “The
record should include documentation that each therapy session was an
active, directed process and the therapist regularly took stock of
specific important treatment issues.” Even if that fits your style of
therapy, please consider the choice to respect a long history of
other approaches to therapy with rich intellectual and cultural
grounding. One
Creative Response to Preserve Psychotherapy for the Commons In
other fields, people are creatively responding to similar problems. Over
25% of all computer servers now use the Linux operating system
software. Linux relies on a General Public License [GPL] permitting
anyone to use or modify it for free. But only if those modified programs
also abide by that same distribution license. Microsoft now considers
Linux a major threat! Other attempts to recoup the commons include new
patent laws, a public domain library, native seed banks, and deeds with
easement clauses protecting land from future environmental degradation.
Can we also protect psychotherapy from corporate confiscation? It
is sad and absurd for professionals to abandon the healing arts to
corporate claims! By collecting professional opinions into a registry,
we consolidate a basis for legal decisions and move to protect
the art and science of psychotherapy. True, this is only a beginning
towards a viable reference “library” of collective professional
opinion to counter managed care. But in time, a more developed registry
on the web can provide a ready response to future challenges confronting
our profession and society. Taking the Colorado experience as a model, a
group in Michigan just garnered signatures from 30% of 6,000
psychologists in their state x[xii] on an issue about continuing
education! Who
Gets to Define Psychotherapy? Please add your voice. You
won’t be alone in signing this petition! You join with AMHA and
National Coalition members, with Colorado psychologists, with the
American Psychiatric Association and many colleagues who have already
signed this petition. •
the so called “clinical staffs” of HMOs? •
pharmaceutical company lobbyists? Signing
the Petition on Confidentiality adds your support to a practice standard
defined and endorsed by a community of Oregon professionals on an issue
critical to the integrity of our profession. Thank you for taking the
time to read and evaluate this material. If
you agree with the worthiness of this project, please go one more step.
Sign the petition on the back of this mailing and send it to the address
below. We
deeply appreciate your consideration. |
Legal, Ethical, and Professional Issues in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy
Intro Contents Legal Ethical Professional Contact Us Bibliography Round Table
ACADEMY FOR THE STUDY OF THE PSYCHOANALYTIC ARTS