Title: Ethical Issues in RecoveryOriented Programs and Practices
1Ethical Issues in Recovery-Oriented Programs and
Practices
- Rethinking Boundaries and Dimensions in
Constructing Mutually Respectful Relationships
2Seminar Objectives
- Identify ones own issues in recovery-oriented
ethical practice - Define classical ethical principles and current
applicability to supporting recovery - Explore means of negotiating ethical boundaries
with peer support specialists - Use principles in ones own practice setting.
3PA OMHSAS Definition
- Recovery is a self-determined and holistic
journey that people undertake to heal and grow.
Recovery is facilitated by relationships and
environments that provide hope, empowerment,
choices and opportunities that promote people
reaching their full potential as individuals and
community members.
4Components of Recovery
- People need
- Hope
- Connectedness
- Support
- Education and knowledge
- Personal responsibility
- Self-advocacy
- Value, purpose and meaning in life
- (OMHSAS Recovery Curriculum Workgroup 2005)
5Recovery Involves More Than Traditional Service
Provision
- Essential components to promote recovery
- Access to recovery oriented services
- Peer and consumer support/self-help groups
- Family and friend supports and relationships
- Work and meaningful activity
- Self-determination
- Management of discrimination
- Community involvement
- Educational opportunities
- Access to training and technologies that foster
recovery
6Clinical Communication in Recovery-Oriented
Practice
- Some suggestions for how to think and behave
under different circumstances with different
levels of risk to the person receiving services
7Suggestions for Recovery-Oriented Practice
- Pat Deegan spells out nine principles and subsets
of these principles in her Common Ground
approach to supporting choice. She discusses
both neglect and toxic help and pays
considerable attention to examining three areas - The comfort zone
- The conflicted zone
- The non-negotiable zone (risk management)
- Her analysis is very useful for practitioners and
supervisors.
8The Conflicted Zone
- When choices appear to be self defeating or
diminish quality of life.
Let the person do what he/she wants (NEGLECT)
Get person to do what I want (POWER/CONTROL)
Response Continuum
9When Conflicted
- Dont abandon the person (their choice) and
neglect rather than empower - Do remain engaged and supportive
- Brainstorm other options discuss pros/cons
- Educate about alternatives
- Talk situation over with supervisor peers
- Dont move to control and out of relationship
10When Risk Management is Needed
- Dont develop a plan on your own and assume the
person will always need such a plan and rely on
it to solve the problem - Consult with others to develop a RM plan
- Remain engaged and openly communicating your
concern and intent, inviting involvement - Include specific criteria in plan that person
needs to demonstrate in order to have a less
restrictive plan restoring more freedom/choice - Problem-solve in advance prevent crises
11Forced Choice vs. Real Choice
- Choosing between only A B forced
- Validating feelings, empathizing with perspective
and preference, and searching for alternatives
with others are necessary - Giving choices even when first one is limited
- Advocacy for preferences may include seeking
legal and/or human rights advice, support from
others who have been affected, forcing creation
of alternatives, looking for out-of-system
alternatives be creative
12Influencing Choice
- Reinforces
- Support choice and goal realization
- Planned and understood
- Informed with accurate information
- Threats, Coercion, Bribes
- Ignores choice
- Focus on workers agenda
- Rely on misinformation and/or inadequate
information
13Thinking about Ethics and Boundaries in
Recovery-Oriented Programs and Practice
- Possible similarities and differences in clinical
practice and in peer support services in terms of
ethical practices and boundary conditions
14BASIC ETHICAL PRINCIPLES
- BENEFICENCE
- NONMALFEASANCE
- AUTONOMY
- FIDELITY
- JUSTICE
- CONFIDENTIALITY
- VERACITY
15BASIC STEPS IN ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING
- Determine the facts (which? whose?)
- Analyze ethical aspects (rights? duties?)
- Outline the options (moral justification for
each?) - Make a decision (results desired process/means
to end) - Take action (reflecting above values/principles)
- Evaluate the decision (from 5 back to 1)
16Definitions Boundary
- Boundaries define space
- Treatment boundary is a psychological containment
field (Bridges,1999) - Boundary is the edge of appropriate behavior in a
given situation (Gutheil,1999) - Shaped by theoretical perspective
17 Relationship of Boundaries to Ethical Principles
and Values
- Proper boundary maintenance imparts the
behavioral message that honesty, integrity, and
respect for the worth of the individual are the
most adaptive ways of coping with human problems - Boundaries provide a sense of safety within which
helping and healing can occur - Attention to boundaries provides clarity about
mutual rights and responsibilities
18Breaches of Boundary(Gutheil, 1999)
- Boundary crossing
- Action does not harm
- May advance treatment
- Boundary violation
- Exploitative or harmful
19Changing Boundaries in Recovery-Oriented Practice
- Considerations
- focus on the person, not the program
- partnership rather than professional expert
- choice and self-management rather than
prescription and compliance - shared process rather than dictated goals
- focus on relationship and trust as central
20Peer Supports Recovery Coach
- Legitimized by dual credentials
- experiential knowledge about recovery acquired by
the process of recovery (ones/others) - Experiential expertise ability to transform this
knowledge into skills for helping others achieve
and sustain recovery - Wounded healers in a long tradition
- those who have suffered and survived and
illness or experience who use their own
vulnerability and the lessons drawn from that
process to minister to others seeking to heal
from this same condition. (p. 5)
21Peer-Based Recovery Supports Provide
- Emotional support empathy, love, caring
concern - Informational support health wellness,
educational assistance, new skills - Instrumental support concrete assistance in task
accomplishment, e.g., applications, help with
child care, transportation, clothing - Companionship connection in recreation, recovery
supports, meeting others
22Possible Roles Defined
- Monitor
- Tour guide
- Advocate
- Educator
- Community organizer
- Lifestyle consultant/ guide
- Friend
- Outreach worker
- Motivator cheerleader
- Ally and confidant
- Truth-teller
- Role model mentor
- Planner
- Problem-solver
- Resource broker
23Outside of the Role
- Sponsor do not provide steps/principles of a
particular recovery program in this role - Therapist/counselor do not diagnose or focus on
problems/issues/trauma - Nurse/physician do not suggest or disagree with
medical advice or prescribed drugs beyond bounds
of your training experience - Priest/clergy do not promote a particular
religion/doctrine/church, interpret, offer
forgiveness or provide pastoral counseling
24Differences in Recovery Support
- Spans periods of pre-recovery engagement,
recovery initiation, stabilization maintenance - Relationships are less hierarchical, involve
different core functions and are governed by
different accountabilities - Consumers of peer-based recovery support services
differ in kinds of non-clinical supports needed
and may need different types of services at
different stages of illness recovery - Services may be adjunctive to treatment or an
alternative to treatment depending on needs
25Dangerous Assumptions 1-7
- People who have a long, and by all appearances,
quality sobriety, can be counted on to act
ethically as recovery coaches. - People hired as recovery coaches will have common
sense. - Breaches in ethical conduct are made by bad
people. If we hire good people, we should be
okay. - Adhering to existing laws and regulations will
assure a high level of ethical conduct.
26Dangerous Assumptions 1-7(continued)
- Ethical standards governing clinical roles
(e.g., psychiatrists, psychologists, social
workers, nurses, addiction counselors) can be
indiscriminantely applied to the role of recovery
coach. - Formal ethical guidelines are needed for
recovery coaches in full-time paid roles, but are
not needed for recovery coaches who work as
volunteers for only a few hours each week.
27Dangerous Assumptions 1-7(continued)
- If a recovery coach gets into vulnerable ethical
territory, he or she will let us know. If the
supervisor isnt hearing anything about ethical
issues, everything must be okay.
284 Ethical Terms for Recovery Coaches
- Iatrogenic unintended, treatment-caused harm or
injury - Fiduciary one person has a special duty and
obligation for the care of another - Boundary Management decisions that increase or
decrease intimacy within a relationship (involves
behaviors disclosures) - Multi-party Vulnerability how multiple parties
can be injured by what the recovery coach does or
fails to do
29A Peer-based Model of Ethical Decision-making
(White et al, 2007)
- Question 1 Potential for harm for whom and
magnitude of risk? - Question 2 Are any core recovery values
applicable to the situation and, if so, what
course of action do they suggest? - Question 3 What laws, organizational policies or
ethical standards apply to this situation and
what actions would they suggest or dictate?
30A Peer-based Model of Ethical Decision-making
(White et al, 2007)
31A Peer-based Model of Ethical Decision-making
(White et al, 2007)
- Gratitude Service
- Recovery
- Use of Self
- Capability
- Honesty
- Authenticity of Voice
- Credibility
- Fidelity
- Humility
- Loyalty
- Hope
- Dignity and Respect
- Tolerance
- Autonomy Choice
- Discretion
- Protection
- Advocacy
- Stewardship
Suggested Course of Action for each Core Recovery
Value
32To Download the Complete Document for your use
- Just google Ethical Guidelines for the Delivery
of Peer-based Recovery Support Services - The paper by William L. White, MA, will come up
for download as a pdf file
33To reach the presenter
- Call Taylor Anderson at 215-831-3574 (or
toll-free at 1-877-243-3033) - e-mail Taylor.Anderson_at_Drexelmed.edu
- Mail Taylor B. Anderson, MSW, LSW, CPRP
- Department of Psychiatry
- Drexel University College of Medicine/BHE
- c/o Friends Hospital, 202W
- PO Box 45357 (4641 Roosevelt Blvd.)
- Philadelphia PA 19124