This class provides IAPST credits which are eligible for credits toward Certification as a Sex Therapist. See iapst.org/certification
See complete list of certificates available in the Accreditation tab
Most ethics workshops have focuses primarily on the essential elements of risk management. While such concepts are clearly important, they represent only a fraction of what ethics and ethical practice should be about. Indeed, most ethics workshops encourage sex therapists (and other healthcare practitioners) to think more like lawyers than as clinicians.
This workshop will follow up on the previous ethics workshop that focused primarily on ethical theory. Here, we take participants beyond the typical admonitions of “bad behavior” and focus on the ethical nuances that clinicians face when dealing with the complex realities of actual clinical practice. Topics to addressed will include: the ethics of informed consent, the ethics of the ban on conversion therapies, and the vagaries of managing sexual feelings in psychotherapy/sex therapy.
To register or access the part 2 asynchronous/self study click -> HERE <-
https://frumtherapist.com/workshops/APPLIEDCLINICAL/viewApplied Clinical Ethics in Sex Therapy Practice
Previously Recorded
Presenter: Daniel N. Watter
Course Length: 3 Hours
This workshop Offers 3 Continuing Education Credits
This webinar is recorded and will not grant live credits.
This class provides IAPST credits which are eligible for credits toward Certification as a Sex Therapist. See iapst.org/certification
See complete list of certificates available in the Accreditation tab
Most ethics workshops have focuses primarily on the essential elements of risk management. While such concepts are clearly important, they represent only a fraction of what ethics and ethical practice should be about. Indeed, most ethics workshops encourage sex therapists (and other healthcare practitioners) to think more like lawyers than as clinicians.
This workshop will follow up on the previous ethics workshop that focused primarily on ethical theory. Here, we take participants beyond the typical admonitions of “bad behavior” and focus on the ethical nuances that clinicians face when dealing with the complex realities of actual clinical practice. Topics to addressed will include: the ethics of informed consent, the ethics of the ban on conversion therapies, and the vagaries of managing sexual feelings in psychotherapy/sex therapy.
To register or access the part 2 asynchronous/self study click -> HERE <-
HOUR 1
Introduction and overview of the day’s agenda
Brief review of Principlism.
HOUR 2
Ethics of informed consent
Ethics of conversion therapy bans.
HOUR 3
Managing sexual feelings in psychotherapy/sex therapy.
Conclusion/Wrap up