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Ethical Considerations for Assessing Parent Mental Health during Child Assessment Services. Ethics Behav 2019;29(2):87-100

Date

01/01/2019

Pubmed ID

34168418

Pubmed Central ID

PMC8220894

DOI

10.1080/10508422.2018.1482746

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85060267802 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   3 Citations

Abstract

Parents play an integral role in the mental health service provision of children and adolescents, and they can have significant effects on the outcomes of youth. A growing body of research has linked parents' own mental health status to numerous outcomes for their children, and recent guidelines have emerged recommending the assessment of parent psychopathology when treating child patients. However, these recommendations present a range of ethical considerations. Mental health professionals must determine if the assessment of a parent is empirically supported and that an assessment procedure appropriate for parents can be feasibly implemented. They must also respect the autonomy and confidentiality of parents while ensuring that assessment findings can be translated to meaningful benefits for child patients. This article details and discusses each of these concerns within the context of the relevant principles and standards of the 2016 American Psychological Association's Code of Ethics. Further, it provides guidelines, relevant clinical examples, and an applied model for mental health professionals to consider the ethical implications of assessing parent mental health when serving child patients.

Author List

Molitor SJ, Dvorsky MR

Author

Stephen Molitor PhD Assistant Professor in the Pediatrics department at Medical College of Wisconsin