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- Trauma survivors are a distinctive population with varying displays of resilience, posttraumatic growth, and resulting mental disorders. Mental health professionals who treat trauma survivors must incorporate specific ethical considerations when working with clients who have a history of trauma. Within the field of psychology, ethics define the standards of professional conduct. The American Psychological Association (APA) describes their Ethics Code as a “common set of principles and standards upon which psychologists build their professional and scientific work” (p. 8). Ethics help clinicians to think through and critically analyze situations, while also serving as aspirations and virtues that clinicians should strive towards. When working with trauma survivors, oftentimes a client's traumatic experiences can be so overwhelming for both the patient and the clinician that professional and ethical boundaries may become endangered. (en)
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- Trauma survivors are a distinctive population with varying displays of resilience, posttraumatic growth, and resulting mental disorders. Mental health professionals who treat trauma survivors must incorporate specific ethical considerations when working with clients who have a history of trauma. (en)
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- Ethical guidelines for treating trauma survivors (en)
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