1. Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to Clients
1.01 Commitment to Clients
Social workers' primary responsibility is to promote the well-being of clients. In general, clients' interests are primary.
However, social workers' responsibility to the larger society or specific legal obligations may on limited occasions supersede
the loyalty owed clients, and clients should be so advised. (Examples include when a social worker is required by law to report
that a client has abused a child or has threatened to harm self or others.)
1.02 Self-Determination
Social workers respect and promote the right of clients to self-determination and assist clients in their efforts to identify
and clarify their goals. Social workers may limit clients' right to self-determination when, in the social workers' professional
judgment, clients' actions or potential actions pose a serious, foreseeable, and imminent risk to themselves or others.
1.03 Informed Consent
(a) Social workers should provide services to clients only in the context of a professional relationship based, when appropriate,
on valid informed consent. Social workers should use clear and understandable language to inform clients of the purpose of
the services, risks related to the services, limits to services because of the requirements of a third-party payer, relevant
costs, reasonable alternatives, clients' right to refuse or withdraw consent, and the time frame covered by the consent. Social
workers should provide clients with an opportunity to ask questions.
(b) In instances when clients are not literate or have difficulty understanding the primary language used in the practice
setting, social workers should take steps to ensure clients' comprehension. This may include providing clients with a detailed
verbal explanation or arranging for a qualified interpreter or translator whenever possible.
(c) In instances when clients lack the capacity to provide informed consent, social workers should protect clients' interests
by seeking permission from an appropriate third party, informing clients consistent with the clients' level of understanding.
In such instances social workers should seek to ensure that the third party acts in a manner consistent with clients' wishes
and interests. Social workers should take reasonable steps to enhance such clients' ability to give informed consent.
(d) In instances when clients are receiving services involuntarily, social workers should provide information about the
nature and extent of services and about the extent of clients' right to refuse service.
(e) Social workers who provide services via electronic media (such as computer, telephone, radio, and television) should
inform recipients of the limitations and risks associated with such services.
(f) Social workers should obtain clients' informed consent before audiotaping or videotaping clients or permitting observation
of services to clients by a third party.
1.04 Competence
(a) Social workers should provide services and represent themselves as competent only within the boundaries of their education,
training, license, certification, consultation received, supervised experience, or other relevant professional experience.
(b) Social workers should provide services in substantive areas or use intervention techniques or approaches that are new
to them only after engaging in appropriate study, training, consultation, and supervision from people who are competent in
those interventions or techniques.
(c) When generally recognized standards do not exist with respect to an emerging area of practice, social workers should
exercise careful judgment and take responsible steps (including appropriate education, research, training, consultation, and
supervision) to ensure the competence of their work and to protect clients from harm.
1.05 Cultural Competence and Social Diversity
(a) Social workers should understand culture and its function in human behavior and society, recognizing the strengths
that exist in all cultures.
(b) Social workers should have a knowledge base of their clients' cultures and be able to demonstrate competence in the
provision of services that are sensitive to clients' cultures and to differences among people and cultural groups.
(c) Social workers should obtain education about and seek to understand the nature of social diversity and oppression with
respect to race, ethnicity, national origin, color, sex, sexual orientation, age, marital status, political belief, religion,
and mental or physical disability.
1.06 Conflicts of Interest
(a) Social workers should be alert to and avoid conflicts of interest that interfere with the exercise of professional
discretion and impartial judgment. Social workers should inform clients when a real or potential conflict of interest arises
and take reasonable steps to resolve the issue in a manner that makes the clients' interests primary and protects clients'
interests to the greatest extent possible. In some cases, protecting clients' interests may require termination of the professional
relationship with proper referral of the client.
(b) Social workers should not take unfair advantage of any professional relationship or exploit others to further their
personal, religious, political, or business interests.
(c) Social workers should not engage in dual or multiple relationships with clients or former clients in which there is
a risk of exploitation or potential harm to the client. In instances when dual or multiple relationships are unavoidable,
social workers should take steps to protect clients and are responsible for setting clear, appropriate, and culturally sensitive
boundaries. (Dual or multiple relationships occur when social workers relate to clients in more than one relationship, whether
professional, social, or business. Dual or multiple relationships can occur simultaneously or consecutively.)
(d) When social workers provide services to two or more people who have a relationship with each other (for example, couples,
family members), social workers should clarify with all parties which individuals will be considered clients and the nature
of social workers' professional obligations to the various individuals who are receiving services. Social workers who anticipate
a conflict of interest among the individuals receiving services or who anticipate having to perform in potentially conflicting
roles (for example, when a social worker is asked to testify in a child custody dispute or divorce proceedings involving clients)
should clarify their role with the parties involved and take appropriate action to minimize any conflict of interest.
1.07 Privacy and Confidentiality
(a) Social workers should respect clients' right to privacy. Social workers should not solicit private information from
clients unless it is essential to providing services or conducting social work evaluation or research. Once private information
is shared, standards of confidentiality apply.
(b) Social workers may disclose confidential information when appropriate with valid consent from a client or a person
legally authorized to consent on behalf of a client.
(c) Social workers should protect the confidentiality of all information obtained in the course of professional service,
except for compelling professional reasons. The general expectation that social workers will keep information confidential
does not apply when disclosure is necessary to prevent serious, foreseeable, and imminent harm to a client or other identifiable
person. In all instances, social workers should disclose the least amount of confidential information necessary to achieve
the desired purpose; only information that is directly relevant to the purpose for which the disclosure is made should be
revealed.
(d) Social workers should inform clients, to the extent possible, about the disclosure of confidential information and
the potential consequences, when feasible before the disclosure is made. This applies whether social workers disclose confidential
information on the basis of a legal requirement or client consent.
(e) Social workers should discuss with clients and other interested parties the nature of confidentiality and limitations
of clients' right to confidentiality. Social workers should review with clients circumstances where confidential information
may be requested and where disclosure of confidential information may be legally required. This discussion should occur as
soon as possible in the social worker-client relationship and as needed throughout the course of the relationship.
(f) When social workers provide counseling services to families, couples, or groups, social workers should seek agreement
among the parties involved concerning each individual's right to confidentiality and obligation to preserve the confidentiality
of information shared by others. Social workers should inform participants in family, couples, or group counseling that social
workers cannot guarantee that all participants will honor such agreements.
(g) Social workers should inform clients involved in family, couples, marital, or group counseling of the social worker's,
employer's, and agency's policy concerning the social worker's disclosure of confidential information among the parties involved
in the counseling.
(h) Social workers should not disclose confidential information to third-party payers unless clients have authorized such
disclosure.
(i) Social workers should not discuss confidential information in any setting unless privacy can be ensured. Social workers
should not discuss confidential information in public or semipublic areas such as hallways, waiting rooms, elevators, and
restaurants.
(j) Social workers should protect the confidentiality of clients during legal proceedings to the extent permitted by law.
When a court of law or other legally authorized body orders social workers to disclose confidential or privileged information
without a client's consent and such disclosure could cause harm to the client, social workers should request that the court
withdraw the order or limit the order as narrowly as possible or maintain the records under seal, unavailable for public inspection.
(k) Social workers should protect the confidentiality of clients when responding to requests from members of the media.
(l) Social workers should protect the confidentiality of clients' written and electronic records and other sensitive information.
Social workers should take reasonable steps to ensure that clients' records are stored in a secure location and that clients'
records are not available to others who are not authorized to have access.
(m) Social workers should take precautions to ensure and maintain the confidentiality of information transmitted to other
parties through the use of computers, electronic mail, facsimile machines, telephones and telephone answering machines, and
other electronic or computer technology. Disclosure of identifying information should be avoided whenever possible.
(n) Social workers should transfer or dispose of clients' records in a manner that protects clients' confidentiality and
is consistent with state statutes governing records and social work licensure.
(o) Social workers should take reasonable precautions to protect client confidentiality in the event of the social worker's
termination of practice, incapacitation, or death.
(p) Social workers should not disclose identifying information when discussing clients for teaching or training purposes
unless the client has consented to disclosure of confidential information.
(q) Social workers should not disclose identifying information when discussing clients with consultants unless the client
has consented to disclosure of confidential information or there is a compelling need for such disclosure.
(r) Social workers should protect the confidentiality of deceased clients consistent with the preceding standards.
1.08 Access to Records
(a) Social workers should provide clients with reasonable access to records concerning the clients. Social workers who
are concerned that clients' access to their records could cause serious misunderstanding or harm to the client should provide
assistance in interpreting the records and consultation with the client regarding the records. Social workers should limit
clients' access to their records, or portions of their records, only in exceptional circumstances when there is compelling
evidence that such access would cause serious harm to the client. Both clients' requests and the rationale for withholding
some or all of the record should be documented in clients' files.
(b) When providing clients with access to their records, social workers should take steps to protect the confidentiality
of other individuals identified or discussed in such records.
1.09 Sexual Relationships
(a) Social workers should under no circumstances engage in sexual activities or sexual contact with current clients, whether
such contact is consensual or forced.
(b) Social workers should not engage in sexual activities or sexual contact with clients' relatives or other individuals
with whom clients maintain a close personal relationship when there is a risk of exploitation or potential harm to the client.
Sexual activity or sexual contact with clients' relatives or other individuals with whom clients maintain a personal relationship
has the potential to be harmful to the client and may make it difficult for the social worker and client to maintain appropriate
professional boundaries. Social workers--not their clients, their clients' relatives, or other individuals with whom the client
maintains a personal relationship--assume the full burden for setting clear, appropriate, and culturally sensitive boundaries.
(c) Social workers should not engage in sexual activities or sexual contact with former clients because of the potential
for harm to the client. If social workers engage in conduct contrary to this prohibition or claim that an exception to this
prohibition is warranted because of extraordinary circumstances, it is social workers--not their clients--who assume the full
burden of demonstrating that the former client has not been exploited, coerced, or manipulated, intentionally or unintentionally.
(d) Social workers should not provide clinical services to individuals with whom they have had a prior sexual relationship.
Providing clinical services to a former sexual partner has the potential to be harmful to the individual and is likely to
make it difficult for the social worker and individual to maintain appropriate professional boundaries.
1.10 Physical Contact
Social workers should not engage in physical contact with clients when there is a possibility of psychological harm to
the client as a result of the contact (such as cradling or caressing clients). Social workers who engage in appropriate physical
contact with clients are responsible for setting clear, appropriate, and culturally sensitive boundaries that govern such
physical contact.
1.11 Sexual Harassment
Social workers should not sexually harass clients. Sexual harassment includes sexual advances, sexual solicitation, requests
for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature.
1.12 Derogatory Language
Social workers should not use derogatory language in their written or verbal communications to or about clients. Social
workers should use accurate and respectful language in all communications to and about clients.
1.13 Payment for Services
(a) When setting fees, social workers should ensure that the fees are fair, reasonable, and commensurate with the services
performed. Consideration should be given to clients' ability to pay.
(b) Social workers should avoid accepting goods or services from clients as payment for professional services. Bartering
arrangements, particularly involving services, create the potential for conflicts of interest, exploitation, and inappropriate
boundaries in social workers' relationships with clients. Social workers should explore and may participate in bartering only
in very limited circumstances when it can be demonstrated that such arrangements are an accepted practice among professionals
in the local community, considered to be essential for the provision of services, negotiated without coercion, and entered
into at the client's initiative and with the client's informed consent. Social workers who accept goods or services from clients
as payment for professional services assume the full burden of demonstrating that this arrangement will not be detrimental
to the client or the professional relationship.
(c) Social workers should not solicit a private fee or other remuneration for providing services to clients who are entitled
to such available services through the social workers' employer or agency.
1.14 Clients Who Lack Decision-Making Capacity
When social workers act on behalf of clients who lack the capacity to make informed decisions, social workers should take
reasonable steps to safeguard the interests and rights of those clients.
1.15 Interruption of Services
Social workers should make reasonable efforts to ensure continuity of services in the event that services are interrupted
by factors such as unavailability, relocation, illness, disability, or death.
1.16 Termination of Services
(a) Social workers should terminate services to clients and professional relationships with them when such services and
relationships are no longer required or no longer serve the clients' needs or interests.
(b) Social workers should take reasonable steps to avoid abandoning clients who are still in need of services. Social workers
should withdraw services precipitously only under unusual circumstances, giving careful consideration to all factors in the
situation and taking care to minimize possible adverse effects. Social workers should assist in making appropriate arrangements
for continuation of services when necessary.
(c) Social workers in fee-for-service settings may terminate services to clients who are not paying an overdue balance
if the financial contractual arrangements have been made clear to the client, if the client does not pose an imminent danger
to self or others, and if the clinical and other consequences of the current nonpayment have been addressed and discussed
with the client.
(d) Social workers should not terminate services to pursue a social, financial, or sexual relationship with a client.
(e) Social workers who anticipate the termination or interruption of services to clients should notify clients promptly
and seek the transfer, referral, or continuation of services in relation to the clients' needs and preferences.
(f) Social workers who are leaving an employment setting should inform clients of appropriate options for the continuation
of services and of the benefits and risks of the options.