6-1 Discussion:
Module Overview16.html
Informed Consent and Confidentiality
All human beings have three lives: public, private, and secret.
—Gabriel Garcia Márquez
Figure 6.1 (http://med.uottawa.ca)
Informed consent and confidentiality are considered the most important cornerstones in the psychology profession. Informed consent involves both verbal and written communication given to a client, student, research participant, advisee, or any other person who receives psychological services or guidance. Informed consent covers all of the rules of engagement. In this communication we impart sufficient information to those we serve in order to help them make a decision about whether or not to move forward with accepting services. As the chart above indicates, we need to provide adequate information, determine if the decision is voluntary, and ascertain the client’s decisional capacity. All clients and others we serve in the field of psychology have a right to know all of the rules and the particulars that go with varying forms of service.
Confidentiality is our promise to those we serve that we will keep private all communications they share except those that are overruled by law. There are always at least three exceptions or limitations to confidentiality. These include when a person is suicidal with plan and intent; when a person is homicidal with plan or intent; and when there is a strong suspicion that child abuse has taken place. In addition to these law-based limits to confidentiality, there are other areas where those we serve may lose their confidentiality. When we bill insurance on behalf of a client, they have agreed, by nature of authorizing billing, that the insurance company can have access to their records. When a credit card is used to pay for services, there is a loss of complete confidentiality by nature of this type of financial transaction. Writing a check for therapy means that check will be deposited in the therapist’s bank account and some privacy is lost in these types of transactions. Confidentiality is more than knowing how to keep quiet about the people we serve. Module Six explores these important considerations and foundations.