18th ANNUAL EARLY HEARING DETECTION & INTERVENTION MEETING
March 3-5, 2019 • Chicago, IL

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9/14/2016  |   1:30 PM - 3:00 PM   |  Critical Ethical Issues Faced By Practitioners   |  Cascade E

Critical Ethical Issues Faced By Practitioners

The Code of Ethics established by the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) identifies the ethical standards that govern the professional treatment of all clients, including survivors and offenders of domestic violence. The purpose of this training is to identify critical ethical issues that may arise in your practice with survivors and offenders. These ethical standards can guide your assessment, intervention, documentation and referral of clients. Specifically, this ethics training will explore issues of confidentiality, informed consent, clients' right to access records, and several other critical ethical issues faced by practitioners, including those who work with survivors and offenders of domestic violence.

  • Review issues related to confidentiality when working with survivors and offenders of domestic violence.
  • Review issues related to informed consent when working with survivors and offenders of domestic violence.
  • Review issues related to clients’ right to access their records.

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Presenters/Authors

Shannon Browne (), Utah State University, shannon.browne@usu.edu;
Shannon Browne has been a Clinical Assistant Professor of Social Work at Utah State since 2005. He teaches in the area of social work practice, child welfare, forensic child welfare, and law and ethics. Prior to his becoming a professor at Utah State, he practiced clinical social work with at-risk adolescents on a mobile crisis team in New Haven, Connecticut. Before his career as a social worker, he was an employment litigator for Paul, Hastings, Janofsky, and Walker in Los Angeles, California and Stamford, Connecticut.


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