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Working with the Client Who Has Experienced Abuse in a Previous Professional Relationship

by Gary Richard Schoener

Gary Schoener is a licensed psychologist and Executive Director of the Walk-In Counseling Center in Minneapolis, MN.  He is the senior author of "Psychotherapists' Sexual Involvement with Clients: Intervention and Prevention",  co-author of "Assisting Impaired Psychologists", and has written many articles on this topic.  Schoener has consulted in more than 3000 cases of sexual misconduct by professionals and was a member of the Task Force on Sexual Impropriety of the American Psychological Association and its Advisory Committee on the Impaired Psychologist.  The Walk-In Counseling Center was the recipient of the 1977 Gold Achievement Award in Hospital and Community Psychiatry from the American Psychiatric Association.

This article has been reproduced with permission from the Walk-In Counseling Center.  Copyright © 1998 WICC.

 Preface

Presented to the Norwegian Psychological Association in Oslo, Norway - 3 & 4 September 1997.   Edited by AdvocateWeb, with permission from the author.

 

Introduction

Let us begin by examining personal variables and issues in the therapeutic situation which can lead to difficulties in taking on this role.

Personal Issues/Variables:  Some questions worth asking are:

  1. Do you have any personal history with sexual abuse or serious violations of trust? Will these present countertransference issues? A personal history of abuse does not rule one out of doing such work, but it needs to be examined.

  2. This can be challenging work and may take some time. Is this a good time for you given the status of your personal and professional lives?

  3. Do you have a good support base professionally? Do you have consultants you can go to?

  4. Do you have a reasonable tolerance for being challenged and questioned?

  5. Do you have a reasonable ability to deal with angry clients? Very needy clients?

The Ultimate Countertransference Trap: Many times therapy involves the therapist feeling like he or she needs to undo the bad deeds or failures of a parent or significant figure in the client's life. Treating someone who has been victimized by one of our own can be an even greater trap. The therapist can try to be "the perfect therapist" who will bring about a corrective experience and undo the harm.

A Variety of Common Dynamics, which can lead to inappropriate intimacy, can also affect such treatment work. Some followup helpers end up sexually involved with the client:

  1. Unconscious re-enactment of incestuous longings;

  2. Wishes for nurturance can emerge & be quite powerful;

  3. Rescue fantasies -- the countertransference trap of doing a better job than someone's parents or previous therapist/counsellor;

  4. Fantasy that love, or sex, are curative in and of themselves;

  5. Repression or disavowal of rage at client's persistent thwarting of your therapeutic efforts;

  6. It is a fertile ground for acting out anger at organization, supervisor, etc.

  7. Defense against grief and mourning at termination;

  8. It is an unreal world -- the "exception" fantasy;

  9. A "safe" ground to experiment -- e.g. sorting out identity confusions:

  10. Cultural myth that the "right woman" can fix the most disordered man

 

Informed Consent

With clients who have experienced unprofessional conduct, behaving professionally is very key.  Operating in a fashion in which there is a clear contract which can be reviewed periodically is key to beginning. Informed consent requires that the client knows what he/she needs to know to make a decision as to whether to enter into counseling and as to what information he/she might be safe in sharing with the counselor. At the very least, clients should be informed of the following items:

  1. The cost of the counseling or treatment, including rules about payment for missed appointments or incomplete treatment, cost of any testing, any issues related to payment;

  2. The limits of confidentiality: who has access to the records, any mandatory reporting obligations (e.g. child abuse), or professional obligations to report

  3. The general nature of the counseling, including techniques & procedures used.

  4. Reasonable expectations and potential negative outcomes of counseling (e.g. that they may become more anxious for a time or remember unpleasant events).

  5. Avenues for making complaints, including your willingness to deal with their dissatisfactions

 

What About Recovered Memories?

The vast majority of cases of professional abuse do not involve memories which were repressed and are later "recovered," although it is not uncommon to put such memories out of mind for a time or to report them much later. However, in a limited number of cases memories spontaneously come back and were truly completely out of consciousness for some time. The American Psychiatric Assn. and American Psychological Assn. have both prepared educational handouts on recovered memories of abuse. Such cases are now a leading cause of complaints and lawsuits in the USA -- some filed by third parties who are accused, and some by clients claiming later the memories were planted.

  • If memories of abuse surface you need to be aware of the fact that careful documentation of the manner in which they surfaced may be important. You need to advise the client that it is difficult to know which aspects of any such memory are accurate. This becomes more of an issue if the client intends taking some action based on these memories.

    • It is prudent for clients to consider all possible outcomes of such actions;

    • Clients need to know that your use of hypnosis or anything aimed at further clarifying such memories other than simple discussion may cause others to question the validity of the memories

  • If you are using hypnosis or other devices for "memory recovery" you should note that there is no good evidence that this brings about the recovery of completely accurate memories. This doesn't mean you can't do it, but just that the client and you need to remember that the "memories" which are retrieved may or may not to accurate.

 

Record Keeping

Some clients are quite distrustful and do not want any records kept, or want to control what is in the records. This cannot be allowed. Your records are your protection. You need to document anything necessary for:

  1. providing a rationale for your diagnosis and treatment;

  2. to satisfy any administrative requirements, contractual obligations, requirements of government or required for payment;

  3. to explain how you handled high risk situations. [so if there is trouble, or a risky situation, your records should be more detailed]

 

Advocacy vs. Psychotherapy

Although psychotherapists are typically biased towards their clients' viewpoints and as such can be said to be advocates for them, it is difficult to be an objective therapist and also actively involved in advocacy. However, if you do not appear to support the client's actions, he or she may not support you. It is important to examine the options a client has and to help them sort them through. We use the Wheel of Options for this -- it is attached as a handout. You can make up your own.

VIDEO: PSYCHOLOGY OF THE HEART

 

Reporting Issues & Challenges

As was noted earlier, you need to be clear BEFORE YOU RECEIVE THE INFORMATION as to what your reporting responsibilities might be. This is particularly important with regard to colleagues with whom you work.

VIDEOS: APA TAPE ON CLIENT OBSTACLES TO REPORTING

VIDEOS: APA TAPE ON PRACTITIONER OBSTACLES TO REPORTING

Both you and the client need to remember that it is the client's complaint that is the important one. Your belief in the client's story is not of great relevence nor is your complaint. Contrary to what most clients believe, the real complaint is theirs. Without a complainant willing to come forward, action cannot be taken.

 

Conceptual Framework for Followup Treatment

It is critical to remember that client victims vary dramatically in level of functioning and psychological history. We find nothing to differentiate them premorbidly from the great range of clients who come in for treatment. This means, however, that you may be dealing with someone who premorbidly was schizophrenic, borderline, neurotic, personality disordered, or who was simply struggling with situational issues and had no history of psychopathology.

As a result of the boundary violations the client may have experienced severe breakdown, PTSD, severe depression, or made serious suicide attempts. By the same token, he or she may not have felt harmed at all and may simply be contacting you to make a report so that someone else is not harmed.

 

Trust & Safety

It is common for clients to indicate that they do not trust you. I would advise supporting this by noting that it is not necessary for them to completely trust you to get help. Furthermore, to indicate that you are not concerned whether or not they trust you -- after all you are a stranger, and they've already been betrayed once -- but whether you can work out a contract to be helpful.

 

Trust and safety are established through professionalism: (1) contracting; (2) being willing to listen to complaints or challenges and respond straightforwardly; (3) maintaining boundaries; (4) not pushing for trust or intimacy; (5) allowing client to withhold data until he/she wants to share it.

 

General Rules

In our book Psychotherapists' Sexual Involvement With Clients: Intervention & Prevention (Schoener et. al., 1989, pp. 99 - 103) we presented the following basic rules, which we still advocate:

  1. Explore how the client feels about seeing you and offer options if needed.

  2. Focus intervention on crisis issues first -- maintaining health and safety

  3. Be clear as to why the client is seeking help from you -- what does he or she want?

  4. Clarify the current status of the relationship with the former therapist, and identify any continuing communication or contact;

  5. Avoid making assumptions about what type of sexual contact occurred. The word "sex" does not always connote physical contact.

  6. Avoid making assumptions about the gender or sexual identity of either party.

  7. Don't make assumptions about the impact of the sexual contact.

  8. Identify what issues still need resolution and make a therapeutic contract.

  9. Don't just focus on the exploitation. Evaluate prior problems or current crises.

  10. Provide advocacy or refer the client to an advocate.

  11. Some clients benefit from writing complaints and from writing diaries.

  12. Consider use of reading material to assist clients in understanding the situation.

  13. Consider a processing session with the client and the offending professionals

  14. Support groups are usually quite helpful if there is one available.

Over the years clients from whom we have had followup feedback have listed two things as having been particularly helpful in recovery:

  1. Talk with other victims/survivors, whether in a group or individually;

  2. Taking some sort of action, whether it be confrontation with the professional, a complaint to an employer, a lawsuit, etc.

Ellen Luepker, who has done groups for victims for 17 years, has recently completed a followup study on members of her groups and found that followup therapy was also highly rated as a help.

Dr. Marie Valiquette (in her dissertation, and also in Lapierre, H. & Valiquette, M. 1989 J'ai Fait L'amour Avec Mon Therapeute, Montreal, Quebec: Editions St. Martin) found that the great variability in impact of the abuse washed out differences and thus individual therapy did not show clear impact. She also found:

  1. Recovery was better if blame was attributed to the former therapist, but

  2. An overly punitive attitude towards the former therapist was related to ineffective coping;

  3. Good social support combined with attribution of causality to the former therapist led to decreased psychological consequences

 

The Spouse and Family

The spouse and family may suffer as much, or more, than the so-called primary victim. We used to call these secondary victims. Luepker now refers to them as associate victims in her excellent chapter in the Gonsiorek book Breach of Trust.

VIDEO: THE PITTS

VIDEO: THE JANSSENS

When there is spousal support, treatment is much easier. Criminalization has helped spouses conceptualize that this is victimization -- not an affair. When there are children, if they have been neglected the victim often has great guilt and shame about this fact. The disconnections with the family must be explored. The family sees distancing, mood swings, irriability without apparent cause. The family may have to severe certain ties, especially if the victimizer is a clergyman.

The spouse often feels a double betrayal. He or she has often had their reality - testing challenged in a "gas lighting" situation. They are likely to feel:

  1. anger towards the victim, and the abuser both

  2. distrust of professionals

  3. impatience with the process of remedy and with the persistence of symptoms

  4. increased responsibility for the family

  5. confusion & ambiguity

  6. loss & grief

  7. helplessness & frustration

We've done groups for spouses which are described in our book, but as a practical matter it is unlikely that you'll have enough at one time to do them. One added element when you as a parent played a role in your child being abused:

VIDEO: MAGNUSON

Family meeting and/or therapy:

  1. Meet the Ghost: understanding what is happening; what has been going on

  2. Meet the Helpers: getting a chance to see the professionals (who you don't trust)

  3. Clarifying everyone's needs, and everyone's roles

  4. Strategies for Mastery: information about process; complaints; etc.

  5. Helping in dealing with consequences: e.g. quitting church, telling grandparents, etc.

 

Group Therapy

The key is to network with other therapists and send out notices to see if you can organize even a small group. Consumer groups may also be helpful. Sometimes groups for sexual abuse victims are helpful, but at times they are not understanding about this type of abuse and do not feel that it bears any resemblance to incest or street rape which they have experienced. We use a 10-12 session model which helps end the isolation, provides support and encouragement, provides help in emotional expression, and provides ideas for coping with challenges. The model is delineated in a series of chapters by Ellen Luepker, Jeanette Milgrom, and Anne List in Psychotherapists' Sexual Involvement With Clients: Intervention & Prevention (Schoener et. al., pp. 155-202). While this work is challenging, we have demonstrated that with proper preparation and some backup consultation, even an inexperienced group leader with no significant experience treating this type of victim can co-lead a group effectively. The group members have such a high need to end their isolation and to meet others who have had this, or similar experiences, that they are very motivated, and typically respectful of each others. As such, it sometimes seems that "the groups run themselves."

 

One Day Workshops

Rev. Marie Fortune and others have done these with victims of clergy, and our center has done a few in connection with workshops. Estelle Disch in Boston has done them for many years with considerable success. She authored a chapter in our book on the topic which is worth consulting before running a workshop. Basically the day has each participant briefly reviewing what happened to her, and her current status, and then eventually each group member tries to discuss challenges and their future plans for further action.

This can be done as a meeting, perhaps in an evening or weekend, where there is a speaker, or the showing of a videotape, followed by discussion. People can participate without revealing anything about themselves. This can lead to additional meetings with more personal discussion, or person discussion may occur spontaneously. Each of the major international conferences on this topic (Minneapolis 1986 & 1992, Toronto 1994, Sydney 1996) has had a meeting time set aside for victims, and in Toronto there was a meeting for professionals who are also victims. A number of professionals who attend such conferences are attending largely because they have been victimized by their pastor or therapist or physician. (Note, Carolyn Bates, the senior author of Sex in the Therapy Hour is a clinical psychologist.)

 

Reading Materials

Peter Rutter's book Sex in the Forbidden Zone, which is in several languages, is still the most common book read by victims. Professional articles, magazine and newspaper stories, and professional books are also useful to some victims depending on what they want to read. Some of these clients have a great need to do as much reading as possible. The other books we utilize are not likely to be readily available in Norway: Ellen Plasil's Therapist was our favorite, but it is not even available in the USA unless one finds it in a used book store. Derek Jehu's book Patients as Victims , which came out in 1994 and is published by Wiley Books in London, England, is fairly recent and has a nice overview of many aspects of the situation. A number of chapters in our book Psychotherapists' Sexual Involvement With Clients: Intervention & Prevention, are copied and shared with victims. So, newspaper stories, magazines, and even professional journal articles may be of interest. Many victims want to know "Why did he do this?" and are quite interested in information on types of offenders.

 

 Individual Therapy

It is very difficult to generalize about individual therapy for victims of prior boundary violations since they vary so tremendously. Some are in very bad shape and require hospitalization or medications for severe PTSD symptoms, psychosis, severe depression, suicide or homocide threats, etc. At the other extreme are those who mainly want help and support on a very short term basis as they file a complaint.

The most common therapy goal is the sorting out of the experience, and the second most common goal is treatment of the problems which were not effectively treated previously. The greatest challenge is to help the client retain any real progress achieved in the prior therapy while sorting out and rejecting aspects of the therapy which were part of the abuse or exploitation.

With some clients there are significant transference problems linked to the prior abuse -- with others there are not. Some clients press the therapist's boundaries, wanting hugs and other personal contact, having liked these in the prior therapy. They find simple talk less satisfying than the intensity of the relationship which became abusive. Some try to challenge boundaries as a way of testing your reliability. Others are quite angry and thus will argue over fees, missed appointments, etc. and ask for special favors because they are "victims." THE BASIC RULE IS TO DO NOTHING DIFFERENT THAN YOU NORMALLY DO. YOU ARE GENERALLY SAFE WHEN YOU PRACTICE WITHIN YOUR OWN STYLE AND APPROACH AND AT RISK WHEN YOU DEVIATE SIGNIFICANTLY. The issue of record-keeping, for example, was discussed earlier.

Over the years we have heard from many clients about their follow-up therapy. The most common errors we hear about are:

(1) Failure to Forewarn the Client of the Limits of Confidentiality, or Violations of Confidentiality: Many therapists have not carefully thought through their reporting duties, such as those required in cases where the abuse occurred when the client was a minor (child abuse reporting) or reporting required by rules or ethics codes. The most common situations in which the therapist fails to forewarn the client, or where the therapist violates confidentiality are:

(a) Cases in which, when the offender is identified, the therapist realizes that he or she is a supervisee, supervisor, consultant, co-worker, or student of the therapist. The therapist then feels duty bound to confront the person, or to report the situation.

(b) That the nature of the complaint and likelihood that others are at risk triggers an ethical dilemma in the therapist who feels a moral obligation to take action. This is something you need to know about yourself before the client reveals the identity.

(c) Through carelessness, when the therapist seeks consultation, or tells a colleague without carefully disguising the case. Norway, like Minnesota, does not have a huge population and the professional community is relatively small. It does not take too many details to tip somebody off as to the identity of the victim or the offender. If the offender has not been identified, you may also find out later that he or she was the person you went to for consultation, not knowing that the complaint was about them.

Note that the client can be instructed that he or she does not have to tell the identity of the person for you to be able to help them. That is optional. However, in some situations you already know the identity because the client blurts it out before you warn her, or because you know who the prior therapist was because you were the source of the referral.

(2) Setting Limits Relative to Your Willingness to be Involved in the Legal or Complaint Process: Many practitioners try to avoid situations in which they have to testify or become involved in legal processes. There is nothing wrong with that. However, as a practical reality in ALL CLINICAL WORK, a practitioner may be called upon to make a report or statement relative to a legal matter. To say that you "don't want to be involved" in a sexual misconduct complaint will be interpreted by the client as non-support or protection of ones colleagues.

I cannot imagine what problem there is with supporting a client who is making a complaint through proper channels, regardless as to how convinced you are of the complaint's accuracy. Nobody benefits from rumour or complaints that are passed on the "grapevine" rather than through complaint channels. Once a formal complaint is made the professional can defend him or herself. You cannot defend against rumors. You need simply to support the client, help process his or her reaction to the complaint process, and certify to what they have told you. Your opinions or beliefs about the complaint are secondary -- the adjudicatory body has to judge the validity of the complaint.

(3) Pressuring the Client to File a Complaint: Just as the old practice of discouraging the filing of a complaint is not helpful, one can go to the other extreme and push the filing of a complaint. We saw a videotape earlier illustrating this. This choice is the client's, and he or she will suffer the consequences. No complaint process is without anxiety and pain. Clients are often ambivalent about taking action, but ultimately it needs to be their choice. Your main role should be to help the client address their ambivalence by gathering information about the complain options and determining which are the best to use given the client's goals and situation.

(4) Undue Focus on the Client's Anger or Other Negative Emotions: Not all clients are angry, and to press a client for years to "get in touch with your anger" is disrespectful and abusive. Stay away from formulas as to what clients who have had this experience are feeling. As we indicate in our book, and as other authors have indicated (e.g. Bisbing, S., Jorgenson, L., & Sutherland, P. [1996] Sexual Abuse by Professionals: A Legal Guide Charlottesville, Virginia: Michie), Pope's "client-therapist sex syndrome" has no empirical support. While some clients have virtually nothing but anger and negative feelings, others have predominately positive ones. MOST CLIENTS HAVE VERY MIXED FEELINGS.

Some aspects of the prior therapy has often been quite positive and some of the feelings, for example, of gratitude are reality-based. In fact, when positive feelings are quite strong the client will have great difficulty because therapists, other victims, family, etc. will not want to hear these. They are the hardest feelings to process or understand. Many followup therapists have trouble accepting these and discount them as the result of transference, denial, neurosis, identification with the aggressor, co-dependency, or delusion. To help the client you need to assist in exporing and valuing all feelings -- positive and negative. Actually, the positive feelings are very important in that they help the person:

(a) Understand why he or she is so confused about the relationship;

(b) Understand why he or she had difficulty leaving the relationship;

(c) Provide clues as to what the client was seeking interpersonally;

(d) Improve self esteem and shore up reality testing by giving credit for positive changes made before the therapy went bad

(5) Bending Rules for the Client: As was noted previously, bending rules for clients who have been victimized is rarely a good idea. The countertransference trap of trying to undo the harm done by an imperfect or exploitive therapist can set the stage for a repeat. You don't need to prove anything. Radically changing your own personal rules by allowing for frequent phone calls, home phone calls, longer sessions, etc. sets the stage for an erosion of professionalism which is never good.

(6) Undue Focus on the Client Trusting You: As was noted earlier, the client will not trust you and should not trust you, based on prior experience and the fact that you are a stranger to them. If trust develops due to your trustworthiness, fine, but don't work at it. We reinforce clients for acknowledging their distrust. Focus on the therapy contract and working on goals. They can decide later if you were trustworthy.

 

The Processing Session

There are times when clients ask the subsequent treating therapist to meet with them and the former therapist. You need to think about this very carefully. There are a number of issues:

  1. What are the limits on confidentiality -- you will now be hearing of the situation from both parties. Is this session confidential? Are there any reporting duties?

  2. What obligations, if any, will this produce in you to ensure that other clients are not at risk? What if your opinion is that this may not be isolated, or the therapist admits to other offenses, or you clinically observe symptoms of serious emotional problems?

  3. You need to distinguish this from couples counseling. You cannot do individual therapy on the victim and couples counseling for the relationship.

If you agree to such a meeting you need to make it clear that it is to gather more information and to help the client process what is going on. It is not designed to help the former therapist OR to help their relationship continue. Note that clients often try to re-establish contact with the former therapist and that this can be an excuse to do this.

The Processing Session, which is discussed in our book, focuses on a quasi-therapeutic processing of what happened between the two. It is similar to Mediation, but mediation involves attempting to settle a dispute or reach an agreement. Processing involves attempting to achieve understanding and to get explanations. Our processing sessions typically involve:

  1. Meeting in a neutral site, with clarification as to confidentiality and purpose;

  2. The victim's recounting of her memory of the events, from the beginning of the relationship, through the therapy process, and then examining boundary breakdowns;

  3. A chance for the offender to respond and present how his memory is similiar or different;

  4. Attempts by the processor to establish common elements in the memories;

  5. A summary at the end as to points of agreement and disagreement.

 


Walk-In Counseling Center (WICC) grants permission for a printout to be made, but asks that multiple reproductions for use as handouts be made known to them.  Please contact them, if you are considering this, to see if they have a more recent handout or one even more suited to your intended purpose.  Any use should properly credit the sources --  WICC and the AdvocateWeb site (http://www.advocateweb.org).  For permission to reproduce more than one copy, contact: Walk-In Counseling Center, 2421 Chicago Ave. S., Minneapolis, MN 55404.

 

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