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16 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Beneficence and Nonmaleficence
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General Principal A: Psychologists strive to benefit others and take care not to cause harm.
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Fidelity and Responsibility
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General Principle B: Establish relationships built on trust and take responsibility for actions. Pro bono services included here
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Integrity
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General Principle C: Promote honesty, accuracy, and truthfulness in the science, teaching, and practice of psychology.
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Justice
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General Principle D: Recognize that fairnes and justice entitle all persons to access to and benefit from the contributions of psychology and to equal quality in the processes, procedures, and services being conducted by psychologists.
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Respect for People's Rights and Dignity
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General Principle E: Respect the dignity and worth of all people,, and the rights of individuals to privacy, confidentiality, and self-determination. Impact of cultural differences. Aware of and reduce biases.
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Preamble and General Principles
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Aspirational and non-enforceable.
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Ethical Standards
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Mandatory and enforceable.
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Client Welfare
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Protection of client welfare is a central goal of the ethical standards.
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Pro Bono Services
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Services with out charge. Addressed in the general principles, therefore encouraged but not required.
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Vicarious Responsibility
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Supervisors or employers may be responsible for the acts of employees or supervisees. Based on differential in in training and experience and the right. ability, and responsibility of the supervisor or employer to control the actions of the supervisee.
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Quid pro Quo
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An explicit or implicit requirement to trade sexual favors for a promotion, raise, or job benefit.
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Hostile Environment
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Sexually offensive behaviors that make it difficult for an employee to perform his/her job. Includes sexual gestures, jokes, remarks, and pictures.
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Informed Consent
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Three requirements: Capacity, Comprehension, Voluntariness
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Confidentiality
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The obligation of psychologists to protect clients from unauthorized disclosure of information revealed in the context of the professional relationship. Both an ethical principle and for some situations, a legal requirement.
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Privacy
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The freedom of individuals to choose for themselves the time and the circumstances under which and the extent to which their beliefs, behaviors, and opinions are to be shared with or withheld from others.
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Privilege
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A legal concept that protects a client's confidentiality in the context of legal proceedings. Psychotherapist-patient privilege.
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