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Professional boundaries

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Professional Boundaries - Defining The Line

  • Core Principle: Maintain a therapeutic relationship focused solely on the patient's well-being. Avoid dual relationships (financial, social, personal, sexual).
  • Key Concepts:
    • Transference: Patient unconsciously projects feelings onto the physician.
    • Countertransference: Physician unconsciously projects feelings onto the patient. Requires self-awareness to manage.
  • Managing Common Issues:
    • Gifts: Decline expensive gifts or anything intended to influence care. Small tokens may be acceptable.
    • Social Contact: Avoid social relationships and online "friending" with current patients.

⭐ Sexual contact with a current patient is always unethical. The AMA advises against sexual relationships with former patients, as the power imbalance may persist long after termination of care.

Boundary Crossings - Gifts, Self-Disclosure & More

  • Boundary crossings are deviations from classic therapeutic activity that are harmless, non-exploitative, and possibly supportive of the therapy itself. Contrast with boundary violations, which are harmful and exploit the patient's vulnerability.

  • Accepting Gifts: Use caution. The physician’s primary guide should be the patient's best interest.

  • Physician Self-Disclosure:

    • Should be rare, brief, and for the patient's therapeutic benefit (e.g., building rapport).
    • Avoid sharing personal problems, which reverses the therapeutic roles.
  • Other Common Crossings:

    • Social Contact: Avoid dual relationships (e.g., treating friends/family) as objectivity may be compromised.
    • Communication: Maintain professional boundaries on social media; do not "friend" patients.

⭐ The core principle is to always act in the patient's best interest, preserving the trust and fiduciary nature of the physician-patient relationship. Any action that benefits the physician at the patient's expense is a violation.

Spectrum of Professional Boundaries

Boundary Violations - Romance, Business & Consequences

  • Romantic/Sexual Relationships:

    • Never permissible with current patients. Constitutes a fundamental breach of trust.
    • Terminating the doctor-patient relationship to initiate a romantic one is unethical.
    • Relations with former patients are strongly discouraged and often considered unethical, especially in psychiatry.
  • Business & Financial Boundaries:

    • Avoid all business transactions (e.g., loans, investments, soliciting) with current patients.
    • Creates a dual relationship, risking exploitation and compromising professional judgment.
    • Gifts: Small, culturally appropriate tokens may be acceptable. Decline expensive gifts or cash to avoid perceived influence.
  • Consequences:

    • State Medical Board: license suspension/revocation.
    • Malpractice lawsuits.
    • Loss of hospital privileges.

⭐ A physician-patient sexual relationship is presumed to be unethical and an exploitation of the power imbalance, even if the patient consents or initiates it.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Never accept expensive gifts; small, culturally appropriate tokens may be acceptable.
  • Avoid treating family or close friends except in emergencies to maintain objectivity.
  • Romantic relationships with current patients are always unethical and a major boundary violation.
  • Relationships with former patients are highly discouraged, considering the nature and duration of past care.
  • Uphold strict confidentiality and avoid dual relationships (e.g., business partnerships) that create conflicts of interest.
  • Recognize and manage transference and counter-transference to preserve professional judgment.

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