Assignment (3 pages) For this Assignment, you will review the literature and applicable code of ethics to analyze what are the most appropriate professional attitudes and behaviors related to working with clients who are on or need medications for mental health and/or substance use disorder stability and recovery.
You must stay within the scope of a Clinical mental counselor
- Should a counselor be able to prescribe psychotropic medications to a client? Why or why not?
- When, if ever, can a counselor share their personal or professional opinions about prescribed medications, over-the-counter medications and/or supplements with a client? Explain your thoughts about this question.
- Who is best qualified to diagnose and prescribe psychotropic medications? What qualifies them to be the best resource for diagnosis and prescribing? What are the relevant codes within the ACA Code of Ethics that support your answer?
- When a client comes to you already on psychotropic medications, what is within your role and scope of practice? What is not within your role and scope of practice?
- If a client needs further evaluation in order to determine their diagnosis and potential need for psychotropic medications, how can we frame the conversation so it is client-centered, empathic, ethical, and informative?
2015
NCDA
Code of
Ethics
The NCDA Ethics Committee acknowledges the work of the American Counseling Association (ACA) and its Ethics Committee.
NCDA, one of the founding associations of ACA in 1952, is a current division of ACA. As with its last revision, the NCDA Ethics
Committee endeavored to follow the structure of ACA’s Ethics Code so that the two codes would be compatible with each other, while
developing, adding, and enhancing profession-specific guidelines for NCDA’s membership. More information on ACA’s Ethics Code
can be found on their website (see the attached web references section).
Nondiscrimination Statement
NCDA opposes discrimination against any individual based on age, culture, disability, ethnicity, race, religion/spirituality, creed,
gender, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, marital/partnership status, language preference, socioeconomic status, or
any other characteristics not specifically relevant to job performance.
Contents
NCDA Code of Ethics Preamble • 1
NCDA Code of Ethics Purpose • 2
Section A
The Professional Relationship • 3
Section B
Confidentiality, Privileged
Communication, and Privacy • 6
Section C
Professional Responsibility • 9
Section D
Relationships with Other Professionals • 12
Section E
Evaluation, Assessment,
and Interpretation • 13
Section F
Providing Career Services Online,
Technology, and Social Media • 15
Section G
Supervision, Training, and Teaching • 18
Section H
Research and Publication • 22
Section I
Resolving Ethical Issues • 24
Glossary of Terms
• 26
References • 27
Index • 27
• 1 •
NCDA Code of Ethics Preamble
David M. Reile, Co-Chair and NCDA Board Liaison
2015 NCDA Ethics Committee Members
Christine Allen; Sharon Anderson; Cheri Butler; Greta Davis; Nancy Davis; Diane Farrell; Jill Flansburg;
Danielle Gruen; Carolyn Jones (co-chair); Meagan Kittrick; Edward Mainzer; Julia Panke Makela; Veronica Mansour;
Sarah Patterson-Mills; Gail Rooney; Gregory Rosenberg; James Sampson; Keley Smith-Keller; Billie Streufert;
Carolyn Thomas; James Westhoff; and Susan Wright
Introduction
A code of ethics helps to define professional behavior and serves to protect the public, the profession, and those who
practice within the profession. Ethical behavior involves incorporating the principles espoused in the code of ethics into
your personal and professional life and using the code to help determine a course of action. At the same time, ethical
behavior is about transparency. Can your behavior withstand the scrutiny of others? Will you be embarrassed, ashamed,
or concerned if someone else knew that you did or said something?
The NCDA Code of Ethics (Code) has been designed as a guide and resource for career practitioners. While it offers a set of
principles that can be applied to a wide range of settings and situations, it is not (nor can it be) comprehensive. If you are
concerned about whether or not a particular practice is ethical, then you should not engage in that behavior without
getting competent advice. More succinctly, when in doubt—don’t; at least not without professional consultation. Peer
review isn’t always going to give you perfect advice; but you can take comfort in knowing that you questioned your
behavior before proceeding and allowed others to comment before taking action. There is safety and strength in the
depth and breadth of opinions you seek before engaging in activity that may be untried or questionable.
Professional Values and Principles
Professional values are one way of demonstrating a commitment to ethical behavior. Career development professionals
acknowledge the following professional values:
1. Enhancing career development throughout the life span;
2. Safeguarding the integrity of the professional working relationship;
3. Practicing in a competent and ethical manner;
4. Supporting the worth, dignity, potential, and uniqueness of everyone; and
5. Honoring diversity and promoting social justice.
6. . These professional values provide a conceptual basis for the ethical principles outlined below. These principles
are the foundation for ethical behavior and decision-making. The fundamental principles of professional ethical
behavior include:
• Autonomy, or fostering the right to control the direction of one’s life;
• Non-maleficence, or avoiding actions that cause harm;
• Beneficence, or working for the good of the individual and society by promoting mental health and well being;
• Objectivity, or treating individuals equitably;
• Accountability, or honoring commitments and keeping promises, including fulfilling one’s responsibilities of trust in
professional relationships; and
• Veracity, or dealing truthfully with individuals with whom career development professionals come into contact.
• 2 •
NCDA Code of Ethics Purpose
The National Career Development Association (NCDA) Code of Ethics serves five main purposes:
1. The Code enables NCDA to clarify to current and future members, and to those served by their members, the nature of
ethical responsibilities held in common by its members.
2. The Code helps support the mission of NCDA.
3. The Code establishes principles that define ethical behaviors and practices of association members.
4. The Code serves as an ethical guide designed to assist members in constructing a professional course of action
that best serves those utilizing career services and best promotes the values of the career profession.
5. The Code serves as a guide for those receiving career services so that they may understand what to expect from
working with a career professional and to understand their rights and responsibilities as consumers of these services.
The NCDA Code of Ethics contains nine main sections that address the following areas:
Section A: The Professional Relationship
Section B: Confidentiality, Privileged Communication, and Privacy
Section C: Professional Responsibility
Section D: Relationships with Other Professionals
Section E: Evaluation, Assessment, and Interpretation
Section F: Providing Career Services Online, Technology, and Social Media
Section G: Supervision, Training, and Teaching
Section H: Research and Publication
Section I: Resolving Ethical Issues
Each section of the NCDA Code of Ethics begins with an Introduction. The Introduction helps set the tone for that
particular section and provides a starting point that invites reflection on the ethical guidelines contained in each part
of the NCDA Code of Ethics. When career professionals are faced with ethical dilemmas that are difficult to resolve, they
are expected to engage in a carefully considered ethical decision-making process. Reasonable differences of opinion can
and do exist among career professionals with respect to ways in which values, ethical principles, and ethical standards
would be applied when they conflict. While there is no specific ethical decision-making model that is most effective,
career professionals are expected to be familiar with a credible model of decision-making that can bear public scrutiny
and its application. Through a chosen ethical decision-making process and evaluation of the context of the situation,
career professionals are empowered to make decisions that help expand the capacity of people to grow and develop.
NCDA’s Ethics Committee members do not hold themselves up as definitive experts in all ethical matters. Further,
they are not experts with regard to legal issues and cannot give legal advice. However, members of the National Career
Development Association are encouraged to contact the committee with questions. The committee works collaboratively to
provide guidance where it can and to provide referrals as appropriate. You may reach the committee at ethics@ncda.org.
NCDA has members in various career services positions (see Career Professionals in the Glossary), as well as
in instructional (counselor educators, counseling psychology professors, etc.) and supervisory roles (Director,
Associate Director, Career Supervisor, etc.). The term “career professional” will be used throughout this
document both as a noun and as an adjective to refer to anyone holding NCDA membership and who is
therefore expected to abide by these ethical guidelines. Additionally, a brief glossary is given to provide readers
with a concise description of some of the terms used in the NCDA Code of Ethics. NCDA members who are
affiliated with other professional associations (i.e., psychologists, school counselors, etc.) should also consult
the ethics codes from those organizations and adhere to the highest standard of professional practice.
NCDA acknowledges and supports its members in their quest to achieve the highest academic and professional
credentials appropriate to their work. Many NCDA members are trained and credentialed counselors, psychologists,
and/or educators with master’s and/or doctoral-level degrees in counseling, psychology, or related disciplines. NCDA
does not encourage or condone replacing these professionals with individuals who have lesser education, training,
and/or credentials. However, NCDA acknowledges, respects, and welcomes individuals regardless of their training
and educational backgrounds and recognizes the valuable contribution that all of its members make in the field of
career development. Thus, NCDA opposes any statement, action, or activity that implies a “second-class” status to any
individuals within our association.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 3 •
Section A
The Professional
Relationship
•••
Introduction
Career professionals facilitate client
growth and development in ways
that foster the interest and welfare
of clients and promote formation
of healthy relationships. Trust is
the cornerstone of the professional
relationship and career professionals
have the responsibility to respect
and safeguard the client’s right to
privacy and confidentiality. Career
professionals actively attempt to
understand the diverse cultural
backgrounds of the individuals they
serve. Career professionals also
explore their own cultural identities
and how these affect their values and
beliefs about the working relationship.
Career professionals are encouraged
to contribute to society by devoting a
portion of their professional activity
to services for which there is little or
no financial return (pro bono publico).
A.1. Welfare of Those
Served by Career
Professionals
A.1.a. Primary Responsibility
The primary responsibility of career
professionals is to respect the dignity
and to promote the welfare of the
individuals to whom they provide
service.
A.1.b. Differentiation Between
Types of Services
Provided
“Career planning” services
are differentiated from “career
counseling” services. Career planning
services include an active provision
of information designed to help a
client with a specific need, such as
review of a resumé; assistance in
networking strategies; identification of
occupations based on values, interests,
skills, prior work experience, and/or
other characteristics; support in the
job-seeking process; and assessment
by means of paper-based and/or
online inventories of interest, abilities,
personality, work-related values, and/
or other characteristics. In addition
to providing these informational
services, “career counseling” provides
the opportunity for a deeper level
of involvement with the client,
based on the establishment of a
professional counseling relationship
and the potential for assisting
clients with career and personal
development concerns beyond
those included in career planning.
All career professionals, whether
engaging in “career planning” or
“career counseling”, provide only
the services that are within the scope
of their professional competence and
qualifications.
A.1.c. Records and
Documentation
Career professionals maintain
records necessary for rendering
professional services as required
by laws, regulations, or agency/
institution procedures. Career
professionals include sufficient and
timely documentation in their records
to facilitate delivery and continuity
of services. Career professionals
take reasonable steps to ensure that
documentation in records accurately
reflects client progress and the services
provided. If amendments are made
in records, career professionals take
steps to properly note the amendment
according to applicable policies. Career
professionals are encouraged to purge
their files according to the time frame
required by federal, state, local, and/or
institutional statute, law, regulation,
or procedure, particularly when there
is no reasonable expectation that a
client will benefit from maintaining
the records any longer than required.
Career professionals are expected
to know and abide by all applicable
federal, state, local, and/or institutional
statutes, laws, regulations, and
procedures regarding record keeping.
A.1.d. Career Services Plans
Career professionals and their clients
work jointly in devising integrated
career services plans (in writing or
orally) that offer reasonable promise
of success and are consistent with
the abilities and circumstances of
clients. Career professionals and
clients regularly review career plans
to assess their continued viability and
effectiveness, respecting the freedom
of choice of clients.
A.1.e. Support Network
Involvement
Career professionals recognize that
support networks hold various
meanings in the lives of clients
and consider enlisting the support,
understanding, and involvement of
others (e.g., family members, friends,
and religious/spiritual/community
leaders) as positive resources, when
appropriate and with client consent.
A.2. Informed Consent
in the Professional
Relationship
A.2.a. Informed Consent
Clients have the freedom to choose
whether to enter into or remain
in a professional relationship. To
make informed choices, clients need
adequate information about the
working relationship and the career
professional. Career professionals
have an obligation to review in
writing and orally the rights and
responsibilities of both the career
professional and the recipient of
services prior to the beginning of
the working relationship. Further,
informed consent is an ongoing part
of the professional relationship, and
career professionals appropriately
document discussions of informed
consent throughout the working
relationship.
A.2.b. Types of Information
Needed
Career professionals clearly explain
to clients the nature of all services
provided. They inform clients about
issues such as, but not limited to,
the following: the purposes, goals,
techniques, procedures, limitations,
potential risks, and benefits of services;
the career professional’s qualifications,
credentials, and relevant experience;
the role of technology, continuation
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
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• 4 •
of services upon the incapacitation or
death of the career professional; and
other pertinent information. Career
professionals take steps to ensure that
clients understand the implications of
diagnosis (if applicable), the intended
use of tests/assessments and reports,
fees, and billing arrangements
(including procedures regarding non-
payment of fees). Clients have the right
to confidentiality and to be provided
with an explanation of its limitations
(including how supervisors and/
or treatment team professionals are
involved); to obtain clear information
about their records; to participate in
the ongoing career services plans;
and to refuse any services or modality
change and to be advised of the
consequences of such refusal.
A.2.c. Developmental and
Cultural Sensitivity
Career professionals communicate
information in ways that are both
developmentally and culturally
appropriate. Career professionals
use clear and understandable
language when discussing issues
related to informed consent. When
clients have difficulty understanding
the language used by career
professionals, arrangements may
be made (e.g., helping to locate a
qualified interpreter or translator) to
ensure comprehension by clients. The
cost for such services, however, may
be passed onto clients in accordance
with federal, state, local, and/or
institutional statute, law, regulation,
or procedure. Thus clients should be
given the opportunity to seek another
career professional or to employ an
interpreter or translator of their own
choosing. In collaboration with clients,
career professionals consider cultural
implications of informed consent
procedures and, where possible and
appropriate, career professionals
adjust their practices accordingly.
A.2.d. Inability to Give Consent
When providing career services
to minors or persons unable to
give voluntary consent, career
professionals seek the assent of
clients to services, and include them
in decision making as appropriate.
Career professionals recognize the
need to balance the ethical rights of
clients to make choices, their capacity
to give consent or assent to receive
services, and parental or familial legal
rights and responsibilities to protect
these clients and make decisions on
their behalf.
A.2.e. Mandated Clients
Career professionals discuss the
required limitations to confidentiality
when working with clients who have
been mandated for services. Career
professionals also explain what type
of information and with whom that
information is shared prior to the
beginning of providing services. The
client may choose to refuse services.
In this case, Career professionals will,
to the best of their ability, discuss with
the client the potential consequences
of refusing services.
A.3. Clients Served by
Others
When career professionals learn that
their clients are in a professional
relationship with another mental
health professional, if appropriate,
they request a written release
from clients to inform the other
professionals and always strive to
establish positive and collaborative
professional relationships, when
necessary and appropriate.
A.4. Avoiding Harm and
Imposing Values
A.4.a. Avoiding Harm
Career professionals act to avoid
harming their clients, students,
trainees, and research participants and
to minimize or to remedy unavoidable
or unanticipated harm.
A.4.b. Personal Values
Career professionals are aware of their
own values, attitudes, beliefs, and
behaviors and avoid imposing values
that are inconsistent with clients’
goals. Career professionals respect the
diversity of clients, students, trainees,
and research participants.
A.5. Roles and
Relationships with
Clients
A.5.a. Current Clients
Sexual or romantic interactions or
relationships with current clients,
their romantic partners, or their family
members are prohibited.
A.5.b. Former Clients
Sexual or romantic interactions or
relationships with former clients, their
romantic partners, or their family
members are prohibited for a period of
5 years following the last professional
contact or longer as required by
all applicable federal, state, local,
and/or institutional statutes, laws,
regulations, and procedures. Career
professionals, before engaging in
sexual or romantic interactions or
relationships with clients, their
romantic partners, or client family
members after 5 years following the
last professional contact, demonstrate
forethought and document (in written
form) whether the interactions
or relationship can be viewed as
exploitive in some way and/or
whether there is still potential to harm
the former client. In cases of potential
exploitation and/or harm, the career
professional does not enter into such
an interaction or relationship.
A.5.c. Nonprofessional
Interactions or
Relationships (Other
Than Sexual or
Romantic Interactions or
Relationships)
Nonprofessional relationships
with clients, former clients, their
romantic partners, or their family
members should be avoided by
career professionals, except when the
interaction is potentially beneficial to
the client.
A.5.d. Potentially Beneficial
Interactions
When a nonprofessional interaction
with a client or former client may be
potentially beneficial to the client or
former client, the career professional
must document in case records,
prior to the interaction (or as soon
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 5 •
as feasible), the rationale for such an
interaction, the potential benefit, and
anticipated consequences for the client
or former client and other individuals
significantly involved with the client
or former client. Such interactions
should be initiated with appropriate
client consent. Where unintentional
harm occurs to the client or former
client, or to an individual significantly
involved with the client or former
client, due to the nonprofessional
interaction, the career professional
must show evidence of an attempt
to remedy such harm. Examples of
potentially beneficial interactions
include, but are not limited to,
attending a formal ceremony (e.g.,
a wedding/commitment ceremony
or graduation); purchasing a service
or product provided by a client or
former client (excepting unrestricted
bartering); hospital visits to an ill family
member; and mutual membership in a
professional association, organization,
or community.
A.5.e. Role Changes in the
Professional Relationship
When a career professional changes a
role from the original or most recent
contracted relationship, s/he obtains
informed consent from the client
and explains the right of the client to
refuse services related to the change.
Examples of role changes include, but
are not limited to:
1. changing from providing
individual career services to
therapy, relationship or family
counseling, or vice versa;
2. changing from a non-forensic
evaluative role to a therapeutic
role, or vice versa;
3. changing from a career
professional to a researcher role
(i.e., enlisting clients as research
participants), or vice versa; and/or
4. changing from a career
professional to a mediator role, or
vice versa.
Clients must be fully informed
of any anticipated consequences
(e.g., financial, legal, personal, or
therapeutic) of role changes with a
career professional.
A.5.f. Other Relationships
Career professionals avoid providing
services to individuals with whom
they have had a previous romantic or
sexual relationship. They also avoid
providing services to friends or family
members with whom they have an
inability to remain objective. If career
professionals engage in providing
services to any of these individuals,
they must consult with another career
professional and document their
reasons for not referring the client to
someone else.
A.6. Roles and
Relationships at
Individual, Group,
Institutional, and
Societal Levels
A.6.a. Advocacy
When appropriate, career professionals
advocate at individual, group,
institutional, and societal levels
to examine potential barriers and
obstacles that inhibit access and/or the
growth and development of clients.
A.6.b. Confidentiality and Advocacy
Career professionals obtain consent
prior to engaging in advocacy efforts
on behalf of a client to improve the
provision of services and to work
toward removal of systemic barriers
or obstacles that inhibit client access,
growth, and development.
A.7. Multiple Clients
When a career professional agrees to
provide career services to two or more
persons who have a relationship,
the career professional clarifies at
the outset which person or persons
are clients and the nature of the
relationships the career professional
will have with each involved person.
If it becomes apparent that the career
professional may be called upon to
perform potentially conflicting roles,
the career professional will clarify,
adjust, or withdraw appropriately
from one or more roles.
A.8. Group Work
A.8.a. Screening
Career professionals screen
prospective group participants. To the
extent possible, career professionals
select members whose needs and
goals are compatible with goals of
the group, who will not impede the
group process, and whose well-being
will not be jeopardized by the group
experience.
A.8.b. Protecting Clients
In a group setting, career professionals
take reasonable precautions to protect
clients from physical, emotional, or
psychological trauma.
A.9. Fees and Business
Practices
A.9.a. Self- Referrals and
Unacceptable Business
Practices
Career professionals working in an
organization (e.g., school, agency,
institution) that provides career
services do not refer clients to their
private practice unless the policies of a
particular organization make explicit
provisions for self-referrals. In such
instances, clients must be informed
of other options open to them should
they seek private career services.
Career professionals also do not
participate in fee splitting, nor do they
give or receive commissions, rebates,
or any other form of remuneration
when referring clients for professional
services.
A.9.b. Establishing Fees
In establishing fees for professional
career services, career professionals
consider the financial status of clients
and the locality in which they practice.
In the event that the established fee
structure is inappropriate for a client,
career professionals assist clients
in attempting to find comparable
services of acceptable cost.
A.9.c. Nonpayment of Fees
If career professionals intend to
use collection agencies or take legal
measures to collect fees from clients
who do not pay for services as agreed
upon, they include such information
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 6 •
in their informed consent documents
and also inform clients in a timely
fashion of intended actions and
offer clients the opportunity to make
payment.
A.9.d. Bartering
Career professionals may barter only
if the relationship is not exploitive
or harmful and does not place the
career professional in an unfair
advantage, if the client requests it, and
if such arrangements are an accepted
practice among professionals in the
community. Career professionals
consider the cultural implications
of bartering and discuss relevant
concerns with clients and document
such agreements in a clear written
contract. Career professionals must
also be aware of local, state, and/
or federal laws, including the tax
implications of such an arrangement.
Further, career professionals must
make the recipients of their services
aware of all applicable federal, state,
local, and/or institutional statutes,
laws, regulations, and procedures
and should direct them to seek
qualified counsel (i.e., attorney and/or
accountant) in determining if such an
arrangement is in their best interest.
A.9.e. Receiving Gifts
Career professionals understand the
challenges of accepting gifts from
clients and recognize that in some
cultures, small gifts are a token
of respect and a way of showing
gratitude. When determining whether
or not to accept a gift from clients,
career professionals take into account
the nature of their relationship, the
monetary value of the gift, a client’s
motivation for giving the gift, the
career professional’s motivation for
wanting to accept or decline the gift,
and all applicable federal, state, local,
and/or institutional statutes, laws,
regulations, and procedures.
A.10. Termination and
Referral
A.10.a. Abandonment
Prohibited
Career professionals do not abandon
or neglect clients to whom they
provide career services. Career
professionals assist in making
appropriate arrangements for the
continuation of treatment, when
necessary, during interruptions such
as vacations, illness, and following
termination.
A.10.b. Inability to Assist
Clients
If career professionals determine an
inability to be of professional assistance
to clients, they avoid entering into or
continuing the relationship. Career
professionals are knowledgeable
about culturally and clinically
appropriate referral resources and
suggest these alternatives. If clients
decline the suggested referrals, career
professionals may discontinue the
relationship.
A.10.c. Appropriate Termination
Career professionals terminate a
professional relationship when it
becomes reasonably apparent that
the client no longer needs assistance,
is not likely to benefit from, or is
being harmed by continued service
provision. Career professionals may
terminate the working relationship
when in jeopardy of harm by the
client, or another person with whom
the client has a relationship, or when
clients do not pay agreed upon fees.
Career professionals provide pre-
termination career services and
recommend other providers when
feasible and necessary.
A.10.d. Appropriate Transfer of
Services
When career professionals transfer
or refer clients to other practitioners,
they ensure that appropriate clinical
and administrative processes are
completed and open communication
is maintained with both clients and
practitioners.
Section B
Confidentiality,
Privileged
Communication,
and Privacy
•••
Introduction
Career professionals recognize
that trust is a cornerstone of the
professional relationship. Career
professionals work to earn the trust
of clients by creating an ongoing
partnership, establishing and
upholding appropriate boundaries,
and maintaining confidentiality.
Career professionals communicate
the parameters of confidentiality in a
culturally competent manner.
B.1. Respecting Client
Rights
B.1.a. Multicultural/Diversity
Considerations
Career professionals maintain
awareness and sensitivity regarding
cultural meanings of confidentiality
and privacy. Career professionals
respect differing views toward
disclosure of information. Career
professionals hold ongoing
discussions with clients as to how,
when, and with whom information is
to be shared.
B.1.b. Respect for Privacy
Career professionals respect client
rights to privacy. Career professionals
solicit private information from
clients only when it is beneficial to the
working relationship.
B.1.c. Respect for Confidentiality
Career professionals protect
the confidential information of
prospective and current clients.
Career professionals do not share
confidential information without
client consent or without sound legal
or ethical justification.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 7 •
B.1.d. Explanation of
Limitations
At initiation and throughout the
professional relationship, career
professionals inform clients of the
limitations of confidentiality and
seek to identify foreseeable situations
in which confidentiality must be
breached.
B.2. Exceptions
B.2.a. Danger and Legal
Requirements
The general requirement that career
professionals keep information
confidential does not apply when
disclosure is required to protect
clients or identified others from
serious and foreseeable harm or
when legal requirements demand
that confidential information must
be revealed. Examples of when
career professionals may divulge
confidential information may include,
but not be limited to, mandated
reporting in cases of suspected or
actual child or elder abuse, when a
client has a communicable and life
threatening disease or condition and
may infect an identifiable third party,
or when notifying a collection agency
to recover unpaid fees from a client.
Career professionals consult with
other professionals, include attorneys,
when in doubt as to the validity of an
exception.
B.2.b. Contagious, Life-
Threatening Diseases
When clients disclose that they
have a disease commonly known
to be both communicable and life
threatening, career professionals may
be justified in disclosing information
to identifiable third parties, if they
are known to be at demonstrable and
high risk of contracting the disease.
Prior to making a disclosure, career
professionals assess the intent of
clients to inform the third parties
about their disease or to engage in
any behaviors that may be harmful
to an identifiable third party. Career
professionals adhere to relevant state
laws concerning disclosure about
disease status.
B.2.c. Court- Ordered Disclosure
When ordered by a court to release
confidential or privileged information,
career professionals endeavor to
inform the client and to obtain written
consent from the client or take steps
to prohibit the disclosure, or have
it limited as narrowly as possible, to
minimize potential harm to the client.
B.2.d. Minimal Disclosure
To the extent possible, clients
are informed before confidential
information is disclosed and are
involved in the disclosure decision-
making process. When circumstances
require the disclosure of confidential
information, only essential
information is revealed.
B.3. Information Shared
With Others
B.3.a. Subordinates
Career professionals make every
effort to ensure that privacy
and confidentiality of clients are
maintained by subordinates, including
employees, supervisees, students,
clerical assistants, and volunteers.
B.3.b. Treatment Teams
When client treatment involves a
continued review or participation
by a treatment team, the client will
be informed of the team’s existence
and composition, information being
shared, and the purposes of sharing
such information.
B.3.c. Confidential Settings
When providing services to clients,
career professionals strive to work
only in settings where they can
reasonably ensure client privacy.
When such a setting is not possible,
career professionals discuss the
limitations of the setting and seek the
client’s consent to proceed. If the client
does not wish to proceed with service
in that setting, the career professional
offers (where possible and available)
alternative options and/or a referral to
another career professional.
When conferring with another
professional, career professionals
discuss confidential information
only in settings in which they can
reasonably ensure client privacy.
B.3.d. Third- Party Payers
Career professionals disclose
information to third-party payers
only when clients have authorized
such disclosure and in accordance
with federal, state, local, and/or
institutional statute, law, regulation,
or procedure.
B.3.e. Transmitting Confidential
Information
Career professionals take precautions
to ensure the confidentiality of
information transmitted through the
use of any medium.
B.3.f. Deceased Clients
Career professionals protect the
confidentiality of deceased clients,
consistent with legal requirements
and agency or institutional policies.
B.4. Groups and Families
B.4.a. Group Work
When working with groups, career
professionals clearly explain the
importance and parameters of
confidentiality for the specific group.
B.4.b. Providing Career Services
to Multiple Family
Members
When providing career services
to multiple family members (e.g.,
spouses/partners, parent and child,
etc.), career professionals clearly define
who is considered “the client” and
discuss expectations and limitations of
confidentiality. Career professionals
seek agreement and document in
writing such agreement among all
involved parties having capacity
to give consent concerning each
individual’s right to confidentiality
and any obligation to preserve the
confidentiality of information known.
B.5. Clients Lacking
Capacity to Give
Informed Consent
B.5.a. Responsibility to Clients
When providing career services to
minor clients or adult clients who
lack the capacity to give voluntary,
informed consent, career professionals
protect the confidentiality of
information received in the
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 8 •
professional relationship as specified
by federal and state laws, written
policies, and applicable ethical
standards.
B.5.b. Responsibility to Parents
and Legal Guardians
Career professionals inform parents
and legal guardians about the role
of career professionals and the
confidential nature of the professional
relationship. Career professionals
are sensitive to the cultural diversity
of families and respect the inherent
rights and responsibilities of parents/
guardians over the welfare of their
children/charges according to
law. Career professionals work to
establish, as appropriate, collaborative
relationships with parents/guardians
to best serve the needs and welfare of
their clients.
B.5.c. Release of Confidential
Information
When providing career services to
minor clients or adult clients who lack
the capacity to give voluntary consent
to release confidential information,
career professionals seek permission
from an appropriate third party
to disclose information. In such
instances, career professionals inform
clients consistent with their level of
understanding and take culturally
appropriate measures to safeguard
client confidentiality.
B.6. Records and
Documentation
B.6.a. Creating and Maintaining
Confidential Records and
Documentation
Career professionals create and
maintain records and documentation
necessary for rendering professional
services. Career professionals ensure
that records and documentation kept
in any medium are secure and that
only authorized persons have access
to records.
B.6.b. Permission to Record
Career professionals obtain permission
from clients prior to recording sessions
through electronic or other means.
B.6.c. Permission to Observe
Career professionals obtain
permission from clients prior to
allowing observation of sessions,
review of session transcripts, or
viewing recordings of sessions with
supervisors, subordinates, faculty,
peers, or others within a training
environment.
B.6.d. Client Access
Career professionals provide
reasonable access to records and
copies of records when requested
by competent clients. Career
professionals limit the access of clients
to their records, or portions of their
records, only when there is compelling
evidence that such access would cause
harm to the client and in accordance
with federal, state, local, and/or
institutional statute, law, regulation,
or procedure. Career professionals
document the request of clients and
the rationale for withholding some or
all of the record in the files of clients.
In situations involving multiple
clients, career professionals provide
individual clients with only those
parts of records that related directly to
them and do not include confidential
information related to any other client.
B.6.e. Assistance with Records
When clients request access to their
records, career professionals provide
assistance and consultation in
interpreting such records.
B.6.f. Disclosure or Transfer
Unless exceptions to confidentiality
exist, career professionals obtain
written permission from clients
to disclose or transfer records to
legitimate third parties. Steps are
taken to ensure that receivers of career
services records are sensitive to their
confidential nature.
B.6.g. Storage and Disposal
After Termination
Career professionals store records
following termination of services
to ensure reasonable future access,
maintain records in accordance
with all applicable federal, state,
local, and/or institutional statutes,
laws, regulations, and procedures
governing records, and dispose of
client records and other sensitive
materials in a manner that protects
client confidentiality. Career
professionals are encouraged to purge
their files according to time frames
acceptable to federal, state, local, and/
or institutional statute, law, regulation,
or procedure, particularly when there
is no reasonable expectation that a
client will benefit from maintaining
the records any longer. Career
professionals are expected to know
and abide by all applicable federal,
state, local, and/or institutional
statutes, laws, regulations, and
procedures regarding record keeping
and disposal.
B.6.h. Reasonable Precautions
Career professionals take reasonable
precautions to protect client
confidentiality in the event of the
career professional’s termination of
practice, incapacity, or death and
appoint a records custodian when
deemed appropriate.
B.7. Research and
Training
B.7.a. Institutional Approval
When institutional approval is
required, career professionals
provide accurate information about
their research proposals and obtain
approval prior to conducting their
research. They conduct research
in accordance with the approved
research protocol.
B.7.b. Adherence to Guidelines
Career professionals are responsible
for understanding and adhering to
state, federal, agency, or institutional
policies or applicable guidelines
regarding confidentiality in their
research practices.
B.7.c. Confidentiality of
Information Obtained in
Research
Violations of participant privacy and
confidentiality are risks of participation
in research involving human
participants, however, investigators
maintain all research records in
a secure manner. They explain to
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 9 •
participants the risks of violations
of privacy and confidentiality and
disclose to participants any limits of
confidentiality that can reasonably
be expected. Regardless of the
degree to which confidentiality will
be maintained, investigators must
disclose to participants any limits of
confidentiality that can reasonably be
expected.
B.7.d. Disclosure of Research
Information
Career professionals do not
disclose confidential information
that reasonably could lead to
the identification of a research
participant unless they have obtained
prior consent of the person. Use
of data derived from professional
relationships for purposes of training,
research, or publication is confined
to content that is disguised to ensure
the anonymity of the individuals
involved.
B.7.e. Agreement for
Identification
Identification of clients, students,
or supervisees in a presentation or
publication is permissible only when
they have reviewed the material
and agreed to its presentation or
publication.
B.8. Consultation
B.8.a. Agreements
When acting as consultants, career
professionals seek agreements among
all parties involved concerning each
individual’s rights to confidentiality,
the obligation of each individual to
preserve confidential information,
and the limits of confidentiality of
information shared by others.
B.8.b. Respect for Privacy
Information obtained in a consulting
relationship is discussed for
professional purposes only with
persons directly involved with the
case. Written and oral reports present
only data germane to the purposes of
the consultation, and every effort is
made to protect client identity and to
avoid undue invasion of privacy.
B.8.c. Disclosure of Confidential
Information
When consulting with colleagues,
career professionals do not
disclose confidential information
that reasonably could lead to the
identification of a client or other
person or organization with whom
they have a confidential relationship
unless they have obtained the prior
consent of the person or organization
or the disclosure cannot be avoided.
They disclose information only to
the extent necessary to achieve the
purposes of the consultation.
Section C
Professional
Responsibility
•••
Introduction
Career professionals provide open,
honest, and accurate communication
in dealing with the public and other
professionals. They practice in a
nondiscriminatory manner within
the boundaries of professional and
personal competence and have a
responsibility to abide by the NCDA
Code of Ethics. Career professionals
actively participate in local, state,
and national associations that foster
the development and improvement
of the provision of career services.
Career professionals are encouraged
to promote change at the individual,
group, institutional, and societal levels
in ways that improve the quality of
life for individuals and groups and
removes potential barriers to the
provision or access of appropriate
services being offered. Career
professionals have a responsibility
to the public to engage in ethical
practice. Career Professionals have a
responsibility to the public to engage
in professional practices that are based
on rigorous research methodologies.
Career professionals are encouraged
to contribute to society by devoting a
portion of their professional activity to
services for which there is little or no
financial return (pro bono publico). In
addition, career professionals engage
in self-care activities to maintain and
promote their emotional, physical,
mental, and spiritual well-being
to best meet their professional
responsibilities.
C.1. Knowledge of and
Compliance with
Standards
Career professionals have a
responsibility to read, understand, and
follow the NCDA Code of Ethics and
adhere to all applicable federal, state,
local, and/or institutional statutes,
laws, regulations, and procedures.
C.2. Professional
Competence
C.2.a. Boundaries of Competence
Career professionals practice only
within the boundaries of their
competence, based on their education,
training, supervised experience, state
and national professional credentials,
and appropriate professional
experience. Whereas multicultural
counseling competency is required
across all counseling specialties,
career professionals gain knowledge,
personal awareness, sensitivity,
dispositions, and skills pertinent to
being a culturally competent career
professional.
C.2.b. New Specialty Areas of
Practice
Career professionals practice in
specialty areas new to them only after
obtaining appropriate education,
training, and supervised experience.
While developing skills in new
specialty areas, career professionals
take steps to ensure the competence of
their work and to protect others from
possible harm.
C.2.c. Qualified for Employment
Career professionals accept
employment only for positions for
which they are qualified by education,
training, supervised experience, state
and national professional credentials,
and appropriate professional
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 10 •
experience. Career professionals
hire for professional positions only
individuals who are qualified and
competent for those positions.
C.2.d. Monitor Effectiveness
Career professionals continually
monitor their effectiveness as
professionals and take steps to
improve when necessary. Career
professionals take reasonable steps
to seek peer supervision, as needed,
to evaluate their efficacy as career
professionals.
C.2.e. Consultation on Ethical
Obligations
Career professionals take reasonable
steps to consult with other
career professionals, the NCDA
Ethics Committee, and/or related
practitioners when they have
questions regarding their ethical
obligations or professional activities.
C.2.f. Continuing Education
Career professionals recognize the
need for continuing education to
acquire and maintain a reasonable
level of awareness of current scientific
and professional information in their
fields of activity. They take steps to
maintain competence in the skills they
use, are open to new procedures, and
keep current with the populations
with whom they work.
C.2.g. Impairment
Career professionals are alert to
the signs of impairment from their
own physical, mental, or emotional
problems and refrain from offering
or providing professional services
when such impairment is likely
to harm a client or others. They
seek assistance for problems that
reach the level of professional
impairment, and, if necessary, they
limit, suspend, or terminate their
professional responsibilities until
such time as it is determined that
they may safely resume their work.
Career professionals assist colleagues
or supervisors in recognizing their
own professional impairment.
They provide consultation and
assistance, when warranted, with
colleagues or supervisors showing
signs of impairment and intervene
as appropriate to prevent imminent
harm to clients.
C.2.h. Incapacitation, Death, or
Termination of Practice
Career professionals prepare and plan
for transfer of clients and files and
disseminate to an identified colleague
or “records custodian” a plan for
the transfer of clients and files in
case of their incapacitation, death, or
termination of practice.
C.3. Advertising and
Soliciting Clients
C.3.a. Accurate Advertising
When advertising or otherwise
representing their services to the
public, career professionals identify
their credentials in an accurate
manner that is not false, misleading,
deceptive, or fraudulent.
C.3.b. Testimonials
Career professionals who use
testimonials do not solicit them from
individuals who may be vulnerable to
undue influence. Career professionals
discuss with clients the implications
of and obtain permission for the use
of any testimonial.
C.3.c. Statements by Others
Career professionals make reasonable
efforts to ensure that statements made
by others about them or the services
they provide are accurate.
C.3.d. Recruiting Through
Employment
Career professionals do not use their
places of employment or institutional
affiliations to recruit or gain clients,
supervisees, or consultees for their
private practices, unless they have
permission. If permitted to solicit
for their private practices, career
professionals must make potential
clients, supervisees, or consultees
aware of the free or low-cost services
already provided by them or others
through their place of employment or
institutional affiliation.
C.3.e. Products and Training
Advertisements
Career professionals who develop
products related to their profession
or conduct workshops or training
events ensure that the advertisements
concerning these products or events
are accurate and disclose adequate
information for consumers to make
informed choices.
C.3.f. Promoting to Those
Served
Career professionals do not use
individual consultation, teaching,
training, or supervisory relationships
to promote their products or training
events in a manner that is deceptive
or would exert undue influence on
individuals who may be vulnerable.
However, educators may adopt
textbooks and/or other materials
they have authored or developed for
instructional purposes.
C.4. Professional
Qualifications
C.4.a. Accurate Representation
Career professionals claim or imply
only professional qualifications
actually completed, use professional
titles accurately, and correct any
known misrepresentations of their
qualifications by others. Career
professionals truthfully represent the
qualifications of their professional
colleagues. Career professionals
clearly distinguish between paid
and volunteer work experience and
accurately describe their continuing
education and specialized training.
C.4.b. Credentials
Career professionals claim only
licenses or certifications that are
current and in good standing.
C.4.c. Educational Degrees
Career professionals clearly
differentiate between earned and
honorary degrees.
C.4.d. Implying Doctoral-Level
Competence
Career professionals clearly state their
highest earned degree in counseling
or a closely related field. Career
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 11 •
professionals do not imply doctoral-
level competence when possessing
only a master’s degree in counseling
or a related field. Career professionals
do not use the title “Dr.” nor refer to
themselves as “Dr.” in a counseling
or career services context when their
doctorate is not in counseling or a
related field. Career professionals do
not use “ABD” (all but dissertation) or
other such terms to imply competency.
C.4.e. Program Accreditation
Status
Career professionals accurately
represent the accreditation status of
their degree program at the time the
degree was earned.
C.4.f. Professional Membership
Career professionals clearly
differentiate between current,
active memberships and former
memberships in associations.
Career professionals only claim a
membership designation in NCDA for
which their education and experience
entitles them.
C.5. Nondiscrimination
Career professionals do not condone
or engage in discrimination against
any individual based on age, culture,
mental/physical disability, ethnicity,
race, religion/spirituality, creed,
gender, gender identity, sexual
orientation, marital/partnership
status, language preference,
socioeconomic status, any other
characteristics not specifically
relevant to job performance, or any
basis prohibited by law. Career
professionals do not discriminate
against clients, students, employees,
supervisees, or research participants
in a manner that has a negative impact
on these persons.
C.6. Public Responsibility
C.6.a. Sexual Harassment
Career professionals do not engage
in or condone sexual harassment.
Sexual harassment is defined as
sexual solicitation, physical advances,
or verbal or nonverbal conduct that
is sexual in nature, that occurs in
connection with professional activities
or roles, and that is either
1. unwelcome, offensive, or creates
a hostile workplace or learning
environment, and career
professionals know or are told
this; or
2. sufficiently severe or intense to
be perceived as harassment to a
reasonable person in the context
in which the behavior occurred.
Sexual harassment can consist of
a single intense or severe act or
multiple persistent or pervasive
acts.
C.6.b. Reports to Third Parties
Career professionals are accurate,
honest, and objective in reporting their
professional activities and judgments
to appropriate third parties, including
courts, health insurance companies,
those who are the recipients of
evaluation reports, and others.
C.6.c. Media Presentations
When career professionals provide
advice or comment by means of
public lectures, demonstrations, radio
or television programs, prerecorded
tapes, technology-based applications,
printed articles, mailed material, or
other media, they take reasonable
precautions to ensure that
1. the statements are based on
appropriate professional
literature and practice,
2. the statements are otherwise
consistent with the NCDA Code of
Ethics, and
3. the recipients of the information
are informed that a professional
relationship has not been
established.
C.6.d. Exploitation of Others
Career professionals do not
exploit others in their professional
relationships.
C.6.e. Scientific Bases for
Treatment Modalities
Career professionals use techniques/
procedures/modalities that are
grounded in theory, are generally
considered to be established
professional practice in the fields of
counseling and career development,
and/or have an empirical or scientific
foundation. Career professionals who
do not must define the techniques/
procedures as “unproven” or
“developing” and explain the potential
risks and ethical considerations of
using such techniques/procedures
and take steps to protect clients from
possible harm.
C.6.f. Contributing to the Public
Good (Pro Bono Publico)
Career professionals make a
reasonable effort to provide services
to the public for which there is little
or no financial return (e.g., speaking
to groups, sharing professional
information, offering reduced fees).
C.7. Responsibility to
Other Professionals
C.7.a. Personal Public
Statements
When making personal statements in
a public context, career professionals
clarify that they are speaking from
their personal perspectives and that
they are not speaking on behalf of all
career professionals or the profession.
C.8. Policies and
Guidelines
C.8.a. Creating and Maintaining
Policy Statements and
Guidelines
As part of informed consent, policy
statements and guidelines assist in
anticipating questions and concerns
and serve as part of an ongoing
dialogue with clients. Career
professionals are encouraged to create
policy statements and guidelines
for use in their practice. Career
professionals ensure that clients are
fully informed, understand, and agree
to the parameters and limitations
of receiving career services. Policy
statements and guidelines may
include, but are not limited to, all
areas of informed consent, such
as incorporating the use of social
media and electronic communication
in professional practice, privacy
and confidentiality (e.g., limits of
confidentiality, documentation, and
records maintenance), boundaries
and multiple relationships, collection
of fees, termination of services, etc.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 12 •
Career professionals are expected to
review their policy statements and
guidelines annually and to update
them as needed.
Section D
Relationships with
Other Professionals
•••
Introduction
Career professionals recognize that
the quality of their interactions
with colleagues can influence
the quality of services provided
to clients. They work to become
knowledgeable about colleagues
within and outside the profession.
Career professionals develop positive
working relationships and systems
of communication with colleagues
to enhance services to clients. Career
professionals may provide coaching
and/or consultation to individuals,
groups, or organizations. If career
professionals perform such services,
they must provide only the services
that are within the scope of their
professional competence and
qualifications.
D.1. Relationships
with Colleagues,
Employers, and
Employees
D.1.a. Different Approaches
Career professionals are respectful
of approaches to career services
that differ from their own. Career
professionals are respectful of
traditions and practices of other
professional groups with which they
work.
D.1.b. Forming Relationships
Career professionals work to develop
and strengthen interdisciplinary
relations with colleagues from other
disciplines to best serve clients.
D.1.c. Interdisciplinary
Teamwork
Career professionals who are
members of interdisciplinary teams
delivering multifaceted services to
clients keep the focus on how to best
serve the clients. They participate
in and contribute to decisions that
affect the well-being of clients by
drawing on the perspectives, values,
and experiences of the profession
and those of colleagues from other
disciplines.
D.1.d. Confidentiality
When career professionals are
required by law, institutional policy,
or extraordinary circumstances to
serve in more than one role in judicial
or administrative proceedings, they
clarify role expectations and the
parameters of confidentiality with
their colleagues.
D.1.e. Establishing Professional
and Ethical Obligations
Career professionals who are
members of interdisciplinary teams
clarify professional and ethical
obligations of the team as a whole and
of its individual members. When a
team decision raises ethical concerns,
career professionals first attempt to
resolve the concern within the team.
If they cannot reach resolution among
team members, career professionals
pursue other avenues to address their
concerns consistent with client well-
being.
D.1.f. Personnel Selection and
Assignment
Career professionals select competent
staff and assign responsibilities
compatible with their knowledge,
skills, and experiences.
D.1.g. Employer Policies
The acceptance of employment in
an agency or institution implies that
career professionals are in agreement
with its general policies and
principles. Career professionals strive
to reach agreement with employers
as to acceptable standards of conduct
that allow for changes in institutional
policy conducive to the growth and
development of clients.
D.1.h. Negative Conditions
Career professionals alert their
employers of inappropriate policies
and practices. They attempt to effect
changes in such policies or procedures
through constructive action within the
organization. When such policies are
potentially disruptive or damaging to
clients or may limit the effectiveness of
services provided and change cannot
be achieved, career professionals take
appropriate further action. Such action
may include referral to appropriate
certification, accreditation, or state
licensure organizations, or voluntary
termination of employment.
D.1.i. Protection from Punitive
Action
Career professionals take care not to
harass or dismiss an employee who
has acted in a responsible and ethical
manner to expose inappropriate
employer policies or practices.
D.2. Coaching and
Consultation
D.2.a. Coaching and Consultant
Competency
Career professionals take reasonable
steps to ensure that they have
the appropriate resources and
competencies when providing
coaching and/or consultation
services. Career professionals provide
appropriate referral resources when
requested or needed.
D.2.b. Understanding
Consultees
When providing coaching or
consultation, career professionals
attempt to develop with their
consultees a clear understanding of
problem definition, goals for change,
and predicted consequences of
interventions selected.
D.2.c. Coach/Consultant Goals
The coaching/consulting relationship
is one in which consultee adaptability
and growth toward self- direction
are consistently encouraged and
cultivated.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 13 •
D.2.d. Informed Consent
in Coaching and
Consultation
When providing consultation, career
professionals have an obligation
to review, in writing and orally,
the rights and responsibilities of
career professionals and consultees.
Career professionals use clear and
understandable language to inform all
parties involved about the purpose of
the services to be provided, relevant
costs, potential risks and benefits, and
the limits of confidentiality. Working
in conjunction with the consultee,
career professionals attempt to develop
a clear definition of the problem,
goals for change, and predicted
consequences of interventions that are
culturally responsive and appropriate
to the needs of consultees.
Section E
Evaluation,
Assessment, and
Interpretation
•••
Introduction
Career professionals use assessment
instruments as one component of the
career services process, taking into
account the client’s personal and
cultural context. Career professionals
promote the well- being of individual
clients or groups of clients by
developing and using appropriate
career, educational, and psychological
assessment instruments.
E.1. General
E.1.a. Assessment
The primary purpose of educational,
psychological, and career assessments
is to provide measurements that
are valid and reliable in either
comparative or absolute terms.
These include, but are not limited to,
measurements of ability, personality,
interest, intelligence, achievement,
skills, values, and performance. Career
professionals recognize the need to
interpret the statements in this section
as applying to both quantitative and
qualitative assessments.
E.1.b. Client Welfare
Career professionals do not misuse
assessment results and interpretations,
and they take reasonable steps to
prevent others from misusing the
information these tools provide. They
respect the client’s right to know the
results, the interpretations made, and
the bases for career professionals’
conclusions and recommendations.
E.2. Competence to
Use and Interpret
Assessment
Instruments
E.2.a. Limits of Competence
Career professionals utilize only those
testing and assessment services for
which they have been trained and
are competent in administering and
interpreting. Career professionals
using technology-assisted test
interpretations are trained in the
construct being measured and the
specific instrument being used
prior to using its technology-based
application. Career professionals take
reasonable measures to ensure the
proper use of psychological and career
assessment techniques by persons
under their supervision.
E.2.b. Appropriate Use
Career professionals are responsible
for the appropriate application,
scoring, interpretation, and use of
assessment instruments relevant to
the needs of the client, whether they
score and interpret such assessments
themselves or use technology or other
services.
E.2.c. Decisions Based on
Results
Career professionals responsible
for decisions involving individuals
or policies that are based on
assessment results have a thorough
understanding of psychometrics
involving educational, psychological,
and career measurement, including
validation criteria, assessment
research, and guidelines for
assessment development and use.
E.3. Informed Consent in
Assessment
E.3.a. Explanation to Clients
Prior to assessment, career
professionals explain the nature and
purposes of assessment and the specific
use of results by potential recipients.
The explanation will be given in the
language of the client (or other legally
authorized person on behalf of the
client), unless an explicit exception
has been agreed upon in advance.
Career professionals consider the
client’s personal or cultural context,
the level of the client’s understanding
of the results, and the impact of the
results on the client.
E.3.b. Recipients of Results
Career professionals consider
the examinee’s welfare, explicit
understandings, and prior
agreements in determining who
receives the assessment results.
Career professionals include accurate
and appropriate interpretations with
any release of individual or group
assessment results.
E.4. Release of Data
to Qualified
Professionals
Career professionals release assessment
data in which the client is identified
only with the consent of the client or
the client’s legal representative. Such
data are released only to persons
recognized by career professionals as
qualified to interpret the data.
E.5. Diagnosis and
Recommendations
E.5.a. Proper Diagnosis and
Recommendations
Career professionals take special
care to provide proper diagnosis and
recommendations and do so only when
making a diagnosis is appropriate and
when properly trained. Assessment
techniques (including personal
interviews) used to determine client
care (e.g., locus of treatment, type of
treatment/services, or recommended
follow-up) are carefully selected and
appropriately used.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 14 •
E.5.b. Cultural Sensitivity
Career professionals recognize
that culture affects the manner in
which clients’ issues are defined.
Clients’ socioeconomic and cultural
experiences are considered when
making a diagnosis.
E.5.c. Historical and Social
Prejudices in Diagnosis
Career professionals recognize
historical and social prejudices in the
misdiagnosis and pathologizing of
certain individuals and groups and
the role career professionals can play
in avoiding the perpetuation of these
prejudices through proper diagnosis,
recommendations, and provision of
services.
E.5.d. Refraining From
Diagnosis
Career professionals may refrain from
making and/or reporting a diagnosis
or recommendation if they believe
it would cause harm to the client or
others. Career professionals carefully
consider both the positive and
negative implications of a diagnosis/
recommendation.
E.6. Instrument Selection
E.6.a. Appropriateness of
Instruments
Career professionals carefully
consider the validity, reliability,
psychometric limitations, and
appropriateness of instruments
when selecting assessments and,
when possible, use multiple forms of
assessment, data, and/or instruments
in forming conclusions, diagnoses, or
recommendations.
E.6.b. Referral Information
If a client is referred to a third party
for assessment, the career professional
provides specific referral questions
and sufficient objective data about
the client to ensure that appropriate
assessment instruments are utilized.
E.7. Conditions of
Assessment
Administration
E.7.a. Administration
Conditions
Career professionals administer
assessments under the same
conditions that were established
in their standardization. When
assessments are not administered
under standard conditions, as may
be necessary to accommodate clients
with disabilities, or when unusual
behavior or irregularities occur during
the administration, those conditions
are noted in interpretation, and the
results may be designated as invalid
or of questionable validity.
E.7.b. Technological
Administration
Career professionals ensure that
administration programs function
properly and provide clients with
accurate results.
E.7.c. Unsupervised
Assessments
Unless the assessment instrument is
designed, intended, and validated for
self-administration and/or scoring,
career professionals do not permit
inadequately supervised use of any
assessment.
E.7.d. Provision of Favorable
Conditions
Career professionals provide an
appropriate environment for the
administration of assessments (e.g.,
privacy, comfort, freedom from
distraction).
E.8. Multicultural
Issues/Diversity in
Assessment
Career professionals use, with
caution, assessment techniques
that were normed on populations
other than that of the client. Career
professionals recognize the possible
effects of age, color, culture, disability,
ethnic group, gender, race, language
preference, religion, spirituality,
sexual orientation, and socioeconomic
status on test administration and
interpretation, and place test results in
proper perspective with other relevant
factors. Career professionals use
caution when selecting assessments
for culturally diverse populations to
avoid the use of instruments that lack
appropriate psychometric properties
for the client population.
E.9. Scoring and
Interpretation of
Assessments
E.9.a. Reporting
When career professionals report
assessment results, they consider
the client’s personal and cultural
background, the level of the client’s
understanding of the results, and the
impact of the results on the client. In
reporting assessment results, career
professionals indicate reservations
that exist regarding validity or
reliability due to circumstances of the
assessment or the inappropriateness
of the norms for the person tested.
E.9.b. Research Instruments
Career professionals exercise
caution when interpreting the
results of research instruments not
having sufficient technical data to
support respondent results. The
specific purposes for the use of such
instruments are stated explicitly to
the examinee. Career professionals
qualify any conclusions, diagnoses, or
recommendations made that are based
on assessments or instruments with
questionable validity or reliability.
E.9.c. Assessment Services
Career professionals who provide
assessment scoring and interpretation
services to support the assessment
process confirm the validity of such
interpretations. They understand
and accurately describe the purpose,
norms, validity, reliability, and
applications of the procedures and
any special qualifications applicable
to their use. The public offering of an
automated test interpretation service
is considered a professional-to-
professional consultation. The formal
responsibility of the career professional
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 15 •
is to the individual/organization
requesting the assessment, but the
ultimate and overriding responsibility
is to the client.
E.10. Assessment Security
Career professionals maintain
the integrity and security of tests
and other assessment techniques
consistent with legal and contractual
obligations. Career professionals do
not appropriate, reproduce, or modify
published assessments or parts
thereof without acknowledgment and
permission from the publisher.
E.11. Obsolete
Assessments and
Outdated Results
Career professionals do not use data
or results from assessments that are
obsolete or outdated for the current
purpose. Career professionals make
every effort to prevent the misuse of
obsolete measures and assessment
data by others.
E.12. Assessment
Construction
Career professionals use established
scientific procedures, relevant
standards, and current professional
knowledge for assessment design
in the development, publication,
and utilization of educational and
psychological assessment techniques.
E.13. Forensic Evaluation:
Evaluation for Legal
Proceedings
E.13.a. Primary Obligations
When providing forensic evaluations,
the primary obligation of career
professionals is to produce objective
findings that can be substantiated
based on information and techniques
appropriate to the evaluation,
which may include examination
of the individual and/or review of
records. Career professionals form
professional opinions based on their
professional knowledge and expertise
that can be supported by the data
gathered in evaluations. Career
professionals define the limits of their
reports or testimony, especially when
an examination of the individual has
not been conducted.
E.13.b. Consent for Evaluation
Individuals being evaluated
are informed in writing that the
relationship is for the purposes of
an evaluation, not to provide career
services. Entities or individuals who
will receive the evaluation report
are identified. Written consent to
be evaluated is obtained from those
being evaluated unless a court orders
evaluations to be conducted without
the written consent of individuals
being evaluated. When children or
vulnerable adults are being evaluated,
informed written consent is obtained
from a parent or guardian.
E.13.c. Client Evaluation
Prohibited
Career professionals do not evaluate
current or former clients, clients’
romantic partners, or clients’ family
members for forensic purposes.
Career professionals do not counsel
individuals they are evaluating.
E.13.d. Avoid Potentially
Harmful Relationships
Career professionals who provide
forensic evaluations avoid potentially
harmful professional or personal
relationships with family members,
romantic partners, and close friends
of individuals they are evaluating or
have evaluated in the past.
Section F
Providing Career
Services Online,
Technology, and
Social Media
•••
Introduction
Career professionals actively attempt
to understand the evolving nature
of the profession with regard to
providing career services online,
using technology and/or social
media, and how such resources may
be used to better serve their clients.
Career professionals strive to become
knowledgeable about these resources,
recognizing that periodic training is
needed to develop necessary technical
and professional competencies.
Career professionals understand
the additional concerns related to
providing career services online and
using technology and/or social media,
and make every attempt to protect
confidentiality and data security,
ensure transparency and equitable
treatment of clients, and meet any
legal and ethical requirements for the
use of such resources.
F.1. Knowledge and Legal
Considerations
F.1.a. Knowledge and
Competency
Career professionals who engage
in providing career services online
and using technology and/ or social
media develop knowledge and skills
regarding related technical, ethical,
and legal considerations. Career
professionals understand and follow
the terms of service of any technology
or social media platform employed.
F.1.b. Laws and Statutes
Career professionals who engage in
providing career services online and
using technology and/ or social media
within their practice understand
that they may be subject to laws
and regulations of both the career
professional’s practicing location and
the client’s place of work/residence.
Career professionals ensure that use of
technology services with clients is in
accordance with all applicable federal,
state, local, and/or institutional
statutes, laws, regulations, and
procedures, particularly when the
services are offered via technology
across state lines and/or international
boundaries.
F.1.c. Outside Assistance
When necessary and appropriate,
career professionals seek business,
legal, and technical assistance
when using technical applications,
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 16 •
particularly when the use of such
applications crosses state lines and/or
international boundaries.
F.2. Informed Consent
and Security
F.2.a. Informed Consent and
Disclosure
Clients have the freedom to choose
whether to access career services
online or to engage in the use of
technology and/or social media within
the career development process. In
addition to the usual and customary
protocol of informed consent between
career professional and client for face-
to-face services, the following issues,
unique to the use of career services
online, and the use of technology and/
or social media, should be addressed
in the informed consent process:
• professional credentials, physical
location of practice, and contact
information;
• risks and benefits of engaging in
the use of career services online,
technology and/ or social media;
• possibility of technology failure
and alternate methods of service
delivery;
• anticipated response time;
• emergency procedures to follow
when the career professional is
not available;
• time zone differences, local
customs, and cultural and/or
language differences that may
affect delivery of services;
• where applicable, pertinent legal
rights and limitations governing
the practice of a profession
over state lines or international
boundaries; and
• social media policy.
F.2.b. Confidentiality and
Limitations
Career professionals inform
clients about the inherent limits of
confidentiality when using technology
and acknowledge the limitations of
maintaining the confidentiality of
electronic records and transmissions.
Where feasible, career professionals
inform clients of anyone who may
have access to such records or
transmissions. Career professionals
urge clients to be aware of those to
whom they give access to information
disclosed using this medium during
the professional relationship.
F.2.c. Security
Career professionals take
reasonable precautions to ensure
the confidentiality of information
transmitted through any electronic
means, including using current
encryption standards within their
websites and/or technology-based
communications where appropriate
to meet applicable legal requirements.
F.3. Client Verification
Career professionals who engage
in providing career services online,
and use technology and/ or social
media to interact with clients take
steps to verify the client’s identity at
the beginning and throughout the
working relationship. Verification can
include, but is not limited to, using
code words, numbers, graphics, or
other nondescript identifiers.
F.4. Providing Career
Services Online
F.4.a. Benefits and Limitations
Career professionals inform clients
of the benefits and limitations of
using technology applications in the
provision of career services. Such
technologies include, but are not
limited to, computer hardware and/or
software, telephones and applications,
social media and Internet-based
applications and other audio and/or
video communication, or data storage
devices or media.
F.4.b. Professional Boundaries
in Providing Career
Services Online
Career professionals understand
the necessity of maintaining a
professional relationship with their
clients. Career professionals discuss
and establish professional boundaries
with clients regarding the appropriate
use and application of technology
and the limitations of its use (e.g.,
lack of confidentiality, times when
not appropriate to use). When
technology-assisted career services
are deemed inappropriate by the
career professional or client, career
professionals provide appropriate
alternatives, including face-to-face
service. If the career professional is not
able to provide face-to-face services
(e.g., lives in another state), the career
professional assists the client in
identifying appropriate services.
F.4.c. Technology-Assisted
Services
When providing technology-assisted
services, career professionals make
reasonable efforts to determine that
clients are fully capable of using the
application and that the application
is appropriate for the needs of the
client. Career professionals verify that
clients understand the purpose and
operation of technology applications
and follow up with clients to address
any issues that may arise.
F.4.d. Access
Career professionals provide
information to clients regarding
reasonable access to pertinent
applications when providing
technology-assisted services. This
access may include being aware of free
and/or low cost public access points to
technology resources and the Internet
within the community, so that a lack
of financial resources does not create a
significant barrier to clients accessing
career services or information,
assessment, or instructional resources.
If career professionals are unable
to provide access to technology
resources, they provide an alternative
method of service delivery.
F.4.e. Communication
Differences in Electronic
Media
Career professionals consider the
differences between face-to-face and
electronic communication (nonverbal
and verbal cues) and how these may
affect the career development process.
Career professionals educate clients
on how to prevent and address
potential misunderstandings arising
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 17 •
from the lack of visual cues and voice
intonations when communicating
electronically.
F.4.f. Use of Assessments via
Electronic Media
When using assessments carried out via
electronic media, career professionals
are responsible for knowing and
abiding by other standard ethical
practices related to client assessment,
such as those outlined in Section E of
this NCDA Code of Ethics. In addition,
where applicable, career professionals
should:
• determine if the assessments have
been tested for online delivery and
ensure that their psychometric
properties are the same as in
print form; or the client must be
informed that the assessments
have not yet been tested for this
mode of delivery;
• determine if the assessments have
been validated for self-help use
or that appropriate intervention
is provided before and after
completion of the assessment
resource if the resource has not
been validated for self-help use;
• make every effort to protect the
confidentiality of client results;
and
• refer clients to qualified career
professionals in his or her
geographic area, if there is
evidence that the client does
not understand the assessment
results.
F.5. Records
Career professionals create and
maintain electronic documents and
records in accordance with relevant
laws and statutes and all other
relevant aspects of this NCDA Code
of Ethics. Career professionals inform
clients on how records are maintained
electronically. This includes, but is
not limited to, the type of encryption
and security assigned to the records,
and if/for how long archival storage of
transaction records is maintained.
F.6. Web Maintenance
and Technology
Development
F.6.a. Maintaining Websites and
Technology Resources
Career professionals who maintain
websites or other technology resources
do the following:
• Regularly ensure that electronic
links are working and are
professionally appropriate.
• Provide electronic links to relevant
licensure and professional
certification boards to protect
consumer rights and facilitate
addressing ethical concerns.
• Assist clients in determining
the validity and reliability of
information found on websites
and in other technology
applications.
• If a website includes links to other
websites, the career professional
who creates this linkage is
responsible for ensuring that
the services to which the site is
linked meet all applicable ethical
standards. If this is not possible,
career professionals should post
a disclaimer explaining that
the linked site may not meet all
applicable ethical standards and
(if known) which standards are
not met by the site.
F.6.b. Multicultural and
Disability Considerations
Career professionals who maintain
websites and other technology
resources provide accessibility or
inform persons with disabilities of
assistive devices that will make the
content accessible, when feasible.
They provide access to translation
capabilities for clients who have a
different primary language, when
feasible. Career professionals
acknowledge the imperfect nature of
such translations and accessibilities.
F.6.c. Qualifications of the
Developer or Provider
Websites and other services designed
to assist clients with career planning
and job searching should be
developed with content input from
career professionals. The service
should clearly state the qualifications
and credentials of the developers.
F.6.d. Managing Job Posting
and Searching Websites or
Databases
All job postings must represent a valid
opening for which those searching
have an opportunity to apply. It
is encouraged that job postings be
removed from the database once
application acceptance deadlines
have passed or shortly after positions
have been filled. Names, addresses,
resumés, and other information that
may be gained about individuals
should not be used for any purposes
other than provision of further
information about job openings.
F.7. Social Media
F.7.a. Creating and Maintaining
a Virtual Professional
Presence
When creating a virtual professional
presence, career professionals
carefully reflect on the goals and
objectives for using available social
media tools. Career professionals
who maintain a professional virtual
presence commit the necessary time
and effort to ensure a continual
presence, avoiding extended gaps
in involvement or communication
with clients that could have negative
effects.
F.7.b. Separating Professional
Presence from Personal
Presence
When career professionals maintain
a professional and personal presence
on social media, separate professional
and personal web pages and profiles
are created to clearly distinguish
between the two kinds of virtual
presence.
F.7.c. Identifying Professional
Roles and Expertise
When using social media, career
professionals clearly identify their
names, training and expertise,
and affiliation to an organization
or employer. Career professionals
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 18 •
only post information and address
questions that are within the scope
of their professional competence and
qualifications.
F.7.d. Maintaining
Confidentiality in Virtual
Spaces
Career professionals act judiciously
to protect the privacy, confidentiality,
and reputation of clients, colleagues,
organizations, and others. Applicable
federal guidelines (such as HIPAA
and FERPA) provide guidance on
protecting confidential and proprietary
information. Career professionals
must avoid posting identifiable
images (without obtaining permission
of those identified) or any personally
identifiable information that could
be used to locate someone offline
(e.g., phone numbers or addresses).
In no circumstance, should protected
or highly-sensitive information be
shared via social media platforms
(e.g., Social Security number, financial
information, credit card or payment
information, counseling or health
records, information subject to non-
disclosure agreements, etc.).
F.7.e. Respect Privacy of Clients’
Virtual Presence
Career professionals respect the
privacy of their clients’ presence on
social media, and avoid searching
clients’ virtual presence unless given
consent to view such information.
F.7.f. Social Media as Part of
Informed Consent
As a part of the informed consent
procedure, career professionals clearly
explain to their clients the benefits,
limitations, and boundaries of the use
of social media.
F.7.g. Social Media Policies
and Fair and Equitable
Treatment
Career professionals develop social
media strategies and guidelines that
provide fair and equitable treatment
to all clients. For clients who may
lack access or have limited technical
knowledge, fair and equitable
treatment may mean providing
alternative service delivery methods.
Additionally, fair and equitable
treatment means creating an approach
to using social media that is consistently
applied and clearly communicated
to all clients. For example, some
organizations may choose a policy of
not linking to any current clients, while
another organization allows career
professionals to link to current clients
only when the client makes a request
and agrees to a social media informed
consent. Still another organization
may find it more favorable to “link”
all clients to an organization page
rather than to link clients to a career
professional’s individual social media
account. Career professionals work
within their organizations to develop
and clearly communicate an approach
so that the social media practice is
transparent, consistent, and easily
understood by clients.
F.7.h. Permanence of
Information, Accuracy,
and Audience
Career professionals recognize that
information posted on social media
sites are largely permanent and easily
shared beyond the privacy settings of
any particular site. Postings should be
respectful and appropriate for broad
audiences. Postings should also be
regularly checked to ensure accuracy
of information shared.
F.7.i. Respect Copyright and
Original Sources
Career professionals post information,
photos, videos, etc. only in compliance
with copyright, trademark, and fair
use laws. When others’ content is
posted, sources are clearly identified,
with links to original materials if
applicable.
F.7.j. Educating Clients about
the Role of Social Media
in the Career Development
Process
Career professionals educate their
clients about the role of social media
platforms in the career development
and job search process. This includes
encouraging both knowledge of the
potential impact that social media
use may have on the professional
relationship between the client and
career professional, and promoting
an understanding of the benefits and
risks of using social media within the
career exploration, job search, and
career management process.
Section G
Supervision, Training,
and Teaching
•••
Introduction
Career professionals foster
meaningful and respectful
professional relationships and
maintain appropriate boundaries
with supervisees and students. Career
professionals have theoretical and
pedagogical foundations for their
work and aim to be fair, accurate, and
honest in their assessments of other
career professionals, students, and
supervisees.
G.1. Client Welfare
G.1.a. Client Welfare
A primary obligation of supervisors
and educators is to monitor the services
provided by other career professionals
or students for whom they have
responsibility. Supervisors and
educators also monitor client welfare
and supervisee/student performance
and professional development. To
fulfill these obligations, supervisors
and educators meet regularly with
supervisees/students. Supervisees
and students have a responsibility
to understand and follow the NCDA
Code of Ethics.
G.1.b. Credentials
Supervisors and educators work to
ensure that supervisees/students
communicate their qualifications to
render services to their clients.
G.1.c. Informed Consent and
Client Rights
Supervisors and educators make
supervisees/students aware of client
rights including the protection of
client privacy and confidentiality
in the professional relationship.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 19 •
Supervisees/students provide clients
with professional disclosure
information and inform them of how
the supervision process influences the
limits of confidentiality. Supervisees/
students make clients aware of who
will have access to records of the
professional relationship and how
these records will be utilized.
G.2. Supervisor
Competence
G.2.a. Supervisor Preparation
Prior to offering supervision services,
career professionals are trained in
supervision methods and techniques.
Career professionals who offer
supervision services regularly pursue
continuing education activities
including both career services and
supervision topics and skills.
G.2.b. Multicultural Issues/
Diversity in Supervision
Supervisors are aware of and address
the role of multiculturalism/diversity
in the supervisory relationship.
G.2.c. Online Supervision
When using technology in supervision,
supervisors are competent in the use
of those technologies. Supervisors take
the necessary precautions to protect
the confidentiality of all information
transmitted through any electronic
means.
G.3. Multiple
Relationships
G.3.a. Relationship Boundaries
Supervisors and educators clearly
define and maintain ethical
professional, personal, and social
relationships with their supervisees/
students, and they avoid or keep
to a minimum nonprofessional
relationships with current
supervisees/students. If supervisors
and educators must assume other
professional roles (e.g., clinical and
administrative supervisor, instructor,
etc.) with supervisees/students, they
work to minimize potential conflicts
and explain to supervisees/students
the expectations and responsibilities
associated with each role. They do not
engage in any form of nonprofessional
interaction in which there is a risk
of potential harm to the supervisee/
student or that may compromise the
supervisory/training relationship,
experience or grades assigned.
G.3.b. Sexual Relationships
Any form of sexual or romantic
interactions or relationships with
current students or supervisees is
prohibited.
G.3.c. Harassment
Supervisors and educators do not
condone or subject students or
supervisees to harassment, sexual or
otherwise.
G.3.d. Close Relatives and
Friends
Supervisors and educators avoid
accepting close relatives, romantic
partners, or friends as students/
supervisees and are prohibited from
engaging in supervisory or training
relationships with individual with
whom they have an inability to remain
objective.
G.3.e. Potentially Beneficial
Relationships
Supervisors and educators are
aware of the power differential
in their relationships with
supervisees/students. If they believe
nonprofessional relationships with a
supervisee/student may be potentially
beneficial to the supervisee/student,
they take precautions similar to those
taken by career professionals when
working with clients. Examples of
potentially beneficial interactions
or relationships include attending
a formal ceremony; hospital visits;
providing support during a stressful
event; or mutual membership in a
professional association, organization,
or community. Supervisors and
educators engage in open discussions
with supervisees/students when they
consider entering into relationships
with them outside of their supervisory
or training roles. Before engaging
in nonprofessional relationships,
supervisors and educators discuss
with supervisees/students and
document the rationale for such
interactions, potential benefits
or drawbacks, and anticipated
consequences for the supervisee.
Supervisors and educators clarify the
specific nature and limitations of the
additional role(s) they will have with
the supervisee/student.
G.3.f. Relationships with
Former Supervisees/
Students
Supervisors and educators are aware
of the power differential in the
relationship between supervisors and
educators and supervisees/students.
Supervisors and educators foster open
discussions with former supervisees/
students when considering engaging
in a social, sexual, or other intimate
relationship. Supervisors and
educators discuss with the former
supervisee/student how their former
relationship may affect the change in
relationship.
G.4. Supervisor
Responsibilities
G.4.a. Informed Consent for
Supervision
Supervisors are responsible for
incorporating into their supervision
the principles of informed consent
and participation. Supervisors
inform supervisees of the policies
and procedures to which they are
to adhere and the mechanisms for
due process appeal of individual
supervisory actions.
G.4.b. Emergencies and
Absences
Supervisors establish and
communicate to supervisees
procedures for contacting them or,
in their absence, alternative on-call
supervisors to assist in handling
crises.
G.4.c. Standards for Supervisees
Supervisors make their supervisees
aware of professional and ethical
standards and legal responsibilities.
G.4.d. Termination of the
Supervisory Relationship
Supervisors or supervisees have the
right to terminate the supervisory
relationship with adequate notice.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 20 •
Reasons for withdrawal are provided
to the other party. When cultural,
professional, or other issues are crucial
to the viability of the supervisory
relationship, both parties make
efforts to resolve differences. When
termination is warranted, supervisors
make appropriate referrals to possible
alternative supervisors.
G.5. Student
Responsibilities
and Evaluation,
Remediation, and
Endorsement
G.5.a. Ethical Responsibilities
Students/supervisees have a
responsibility to understand and
follow the NCDA Code of Ethics.
Students/supervisees have the same
obligation to clients as those required
of other career professionals.
G.5.b. Impairment
Students/supervisees monitor
themselves for signs of impairment
from their own physical, mental, or
emotional problems and refrain from
offering or providing professional
services when such impairment is
likely to harm a client or others. They
notify their faculty and/or supervisors
and seek assistance for problems
that reach the level of professional
impairment, and, if necessary, they
limit, suspend, or terminate their
professional responsibilities until it
is determined that they may safely
resume their work.
G.5.c. Professional Disclosure
Before providing services, students/
supervisees disclose their status and
explain how this status affects the
limits of confidentiality. Supervisors
and educators ensure that clients are
aware of the services rendered and
the qualifications of the students/
supervisees rendering those services.
Students/supervisees obtain client
permission before they use any
information concerning the counseling
relationship in the training process.
G.5.d. Evaluation
Supervisors and educators clearly
state to students/supervisees, prior to
and throughout the training program,
the levels of competency expected,
appraisal methods, and timing of
evaluations for all areas of competency.
Supervisors and educators document
and provide students/supervisees
with ongoing performance appraisal
and evaluation feedback throughout
the training program.
G.5.e. Limitations and
Remediation
Through ongoing evaluation and
appraisal, supervisors and educators
are aware of the limitations of
students/supervisees that might
impede performance. Supervisors and
educators assist students/supervisees
in securing remedial assistance when
needed. If students/supervisees
request counseling or if counseling
services are required as part of a
remediation process, educators
and supervisors provide acceptable
referrals. Supervisors and educators
recommend dismissal from training
programs, applied practice settings,
or state or voluntary professional
credentialing processes when those
students/supervisees are unable
to provide competent professional
services. Supervisors and educators
seek consultation and document their
decisions to dismiss or refer students/
supervisees for assistance. They
ensure that students/supervisees are
aware of options available to them to
address such decisions and ensure that
students/supervisees have recourse in
a timely manner to address decisions
to require them to seek assistance or to
dismiss them and provide them with
due process according to institutional
policies and procedures.
G.5.f. Multiple Roles/
Relationships with
Students and Supervisees
If students/supervisees request
counseling, career services, or any
other professional service which a
supervisor or educator may ordinarily
offer, the supervisor or educator will
provide the student/supervisee with
acceptable referrals. Supervisors and
educators do not typically engage
in multiple roles/relationships with
students/supervisees. If supervisors
or educators must provide a service
to a student or supervisee in addition
to providing supervision, they work
to minimize potential conflicts and
explain to students/supervisees the
expectations and responsibilities
associated with each role. In addition,
the supervisor or educator must
address participation in multiple
roles/relationships with the students/
supervisees in terms of the impact of
these issues on clients, the supervisory
relationship, and professional
functioning.
G.5.g. Endorsement
Supervisors and educators endorse
students/supervisees for certification,
licensure, employment, or completion
of an academic or training program
only when they believe the students/
supervisees are qualified for the
endorsement. In addition, supervisors
and educators do not withhold
endorsement of qualified students/
supervisees for certification, licensure,
employment, or completion of an
academic or training program for any
reason unrelated to their fitness as a
student or professional. Regardless
of qualifications, supervisors and
educators do not endorse students/
supervisees whom they believe to
be impaired in any way that would
interfere with the performance
of the duties associated with the
endorsement.
G.6. Responsibilities of
Educators
G.6.a. Educators
Educators who are responsible for
developing, implementing, and
supervising educational programs are
skilled as teachers and practitioners.
They are knowledgeable regarding
the ethical, legal, and regulatory
aspects of the profession, are skilled
in applying that knowledge, and
make students and supervisees aware
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 21 •
of their responsibilities. Educators
conduct education and training
programs in an ethical manner and
serve as role models for professional
behavior. Career professionals who
function as educators or supervisors
provide instruction within their areas
of knowledge and competence and
provide instruction based on current
information and knowledge available
in the profession. When using
technology to deliver instruction,
educators develop competence in the
use of the technology.
G.6.b. Integration of Study and
Practice
Educators establish education and
training programs that integrate
academic study and supervised
practice.
G.6.c. Teaching Ethics
Educators make students and
supervisees aware of the ethical
responsibilities and standards
of the profession and the ethical
responsibilities of students to the
profession. Educators infuse ethical
considerations throughout the
curriculum.
G.6.d. Peer Relationships
Educators make every effort to
ensure that the rights of peers are
not compromised when students or
supervisees lead career groups or
provide supervision. Educators take
steps to ensure that students and
supervisees understand they have the
same ethical obligations as educators,
trainers, and supervisors.
G.6.e. Innovative Theories and
Techniques
When educators teach techniques/
procedures that are innovative, without
an empirical foundation, or without a
well-grounded theoretical foundation,
they define the techniques/procedures
as “unproven” or “developing” and
explain to students the potential risks
and ethical considerations of using
such techniques/procedures.
G.6.f. Field Placements
Educators develop clear policies
within their training programs
regarding field placement and other
practical experiences. Educators
provide clearly stated roles and
responsibilities for the student or
supervisee, the site supervisor, and
the program supervisor. They confirm
that site supervisors are qualified to
provide supervision and inform site
supervisors of their professional and
ethical responsibilities in this role.
In addition, educators do not accept
any form of professional services,
fees, commissions, reimbursement, or
remuneration from a site for student
or supervisee placement.
G.7. Student Welfare
G.7.a. Orientation
Educators recognize that orientation
is a developmental process that
continues throughout the education
and training of students. Faculty
provide prospective and current
students with information about the
educational program’s expectations
including but not necessarily limited
to:
1. the type and level of skill and
knowledge acquisition required
for successful completion of the
training;
2. training program goals, objectives,
and mission, and subject matter to
be covered, including technology
requirements;
3. bases for evaluation;
4. training components that
encourage self-growth or self-
disclosure as part of the training
process;
5. the type of supervision settings
and requirements of the sites for
required clinical field experiences;
6. student and supervisee evaluation
and dismissal policies and
procedures; and
7. up-to-date employment prospects
for graduates and career
advisement, including making
them aware of opportunities in
the field.
G.7.b. Self-Growth Experiences
Education programs delineate
requirements for self-disclosure
or self-growth experiences in their
admission and program materials.
Educators use professional judgment
when designing training experiences
they conduct that require student
and supervisee self-growth or self-
disclosure. Students and supervisees
are made aware of the ramifications
their self-disclosure may have when
career professionals whose primary
role as teacher, trainer, or supervisor
requires acting on ethical obligations
to the profession. Evaluative
components of experiential training
activities explicitly delineate
predetermined academic standards
that are separate from and do not
depend on the student’s level of self-
disclosure. Educators and supervisors
may require students/supervisees
to seek professional help to address
any personal concerns that may be
affecting their competency.
G.8. Multicultural/
Diversity
Competence in
Education and
Training Programs
G.8.a. Faculty Diversity
Educators are committed to recruiting
and retaining a diverse faculty.
G.8.b. Student Diversity
Educators actively attempt to recruit
and retain a diverse student body.
Educators demonstrate commitment
to multicultural/diversity competence
by recognizing and valuing diverse
cultures and types of abilities students
bring to the training experience.
Educators provide appropriate
accommodations that enhance and
support diverse student well-being
and academic performance.
G.8.c. Multicultural/Diversity
Competence
Educators actively infuse
multicultural/diversity competency
in their training and supervision
practices. They actively train students
to gain awareness, knowledge,
and skills in the competencies of
multicultural practice.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 22 •
Section H
Research and
Publication
•••
Introduction
Career professionals who conduct
research are encouraged to contribute
to the knowledge base of the
profession and promote a clearer
understanding of the conditions
that lead to a healthy and more just
society. Career professionals support
efforts of researchers by participating
fully and willingly whenever possible.
Career professionals minimize bias
and respect diversity in designing and
implementing research.
H.1. Research
Responsibilities
H.1.a. Use of Human Research
Participants
Career professionals plan, design,
conduct, and report research in
a manner that is consistent with
pertinent ethical principles, all
applicable federal, state, and local
statutes, laws, regulations, and/
or procedures, host institutional
regulations, and scientific standards
governing research with human
research participants.
H.1.b. Need for Research and
Review
Career professionals have an obligation
to contribute to periodic evaluations
of the services they provide to their
clients. The interventions, techniques,
and methods of service delivery they
use should be evaluated to establish
evidence-based practice. Career
professionals also have an obligation
to periodically review the evaluation
and research literature in their area
of expertise so that the career services
they provide to their clients reflect
established best practice.
H.1.c. Deviation from Standard
Practice
Career professionals seek consultation
and observe stringent safeguards
to protect the rights of research
participants when a research problem
suggests a deviation from standard or
acceptable practices.
H.1.d. Independent Researchers
When career professionals conduct
independent research and do not
have access to an Institutional Review
Board (IRB), they are bound to the
same ethical principles and federal
and state laws pertaining to the
review of their plan, design, conduct
and reporting of research. When
independent researchers do not have
access to an IRB, they should consult
with researchers who are familiar
with IRB procedures to provide
appropriate safeguards.
H.1.e. Precautions to Avoid
Injury
Career professionals who conduct
research with human participants
are responsible for the welfare of
participants throughout the research
process and should take reasonable
precautions to avoid causing injurious
psychological, emotional, physical, or
social effects to participants.
H.1.f. Principal Researcher
Responsibility
The ultimate responsibility for ethical
research practice lies with the principal
researcher. All others involved in
the research activities share ethical
obligations and responsibility for their
own actions.
H.1.g. Minimal Interference
Career professionals take reasonable
precautions to avoid causing
disruptions in the lives of research
participants that could be caused by
their involvement in research.
H.1.h. Multicultural/Diversity
Considerations in
Research
When appropriate to research goals,
career professionals are sensitive to
incorporating research procedures
that take into account cultural
considerations. They seek consultation
when appropriate.
H.2. Rights of Research
Participants
H.2.a. Informed Consent in
Research
Individuals have the right to
decline requests to become research
participants. In seeking consent,
career professionals use language that
1. accurately explains the purpose
and procedures to be followed;
2. identifies any procedures that are
experimental or relatively untried;
3. describes any attendant
discomforts, risks, and potential
power differentials between
researchers and participants;
4. describes any benefits or changes
in individuals or organizations
that might be reasonably expected;
5. discloses appropriate alternative
procedures that would be
advantageous for participants;
6. offers to answer any inquiries
concerning the procedures;
7. describes any limitations on
confidentiality;
8. describes the format and
potential target audiences for
the dissemination of research
findings; and
9. instructs participants that they
are free to withdraw their consent
and to discontinue participation
in the project at any time without
penalty.
H.2.b. Deception
Career professionals do not conduct
research involving deception unless
alternative procedures are not
feasible and the prospective value of
the research justifies the deception.
If such deception has the potential
to cause physical or emotional
harm to research participants, the
research is not conducted, regardless
of prospective value. When the
methodological requirements of a
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 23 •
study necessitate concealment or
deception, the investigator explains
the reasons for this action as soon as
possible during the debriefing.
H.2.c. Student/Supervisee
Participation
Researchers who involve students or
supervisees in research make clear
to them that the decision regarding
whether or not to participate in
research activities does not affect one’s
academic standing or supervisory
relationship. Students or supervisees
who choose not to participate in
educational research are provided
with an appropriate alternative
to fulfill their academic or other
requirements.
H.2.d. Client Participation
Career professionals conducting
research involving clients make clear
in the informed consent process that
clients are free to choose whether or
not to participate in research activities.
Career professionals take necessary
precautions to protect clients from
adverse consequences of declining or
withdrawing from participation.
H.2.e. Confidentiality of
Information
Information obtained about research
participants during the course of
an investigation is confidential.
Procedures are implemented to
protect confidentiality.
H.2.f. Persons Not Capable of
Giving Informed Consent
When a person is not capable of giving
informed consent, career professionals
provide an appropriate explanation
to, obtain agreement for participation
from, and obtain the appropriate
consent of a legally authorized person.
H.2.g. Commitments to
Participants
Career professionals take reasonable
measures to honor all commitments to
research participants.
H.2.h. Explanations After Data
Collection
After data are collected, career
professionals provide participants
with full clarification of the
nature of the study to remove any
misconceptions participants might
have regarding the research. Where
scientific or human values justify
delaying or withholding information,
career professionals take reasonable
measures to avoid causing harm.
H.2.i. Informing Sponsors
Career professionals inform sponsors,
institutions, and publication channels
regarding research procedures and
outcomes. Career professionals
ensure that appropriate bodies
and authorities are given pertinent
information and acknowledgment.
H.2.j. Disposal of Research
Documents and Records
Within a reasonable period of time
following the completion of a research
project or study, career professionals
take steps to destroy records or
documents (audio, video, digital,
and written) containing confidential
data or information that identifies
research participants in accordance
with all applicable federal, state,
local, and/or institutional statutes,
laws, regulations, and procedures.
When records are of an artistic
nature, researchers obtain participant
consent with regard to handling of
such records or documents. Career
professionals are encouraged to purge
their files according to the time frame
required by federal, state, local, and/or
institutional statute, law, regulation,
or procedure, particularly when there
is no reasonable expectation that
anyone will benefit from maintaining
the records any longer.
H.3. Relationships with
Research Participants
(When Research
Involves Intensive
or Extended
Interactions)
H.3.a. Nonprofessional
Relationships
Nonprofessional relationships with
research participants should be
avoided as these interactions may
set up dual relationships and role
confusion that may be harmful to the
emotional health of participants.
H.3.b. Relationships with
Research Participants
Sexual or romantic interactions
or relationships between career
professionals/researchers and current
research participants are prohibited.
H.3.c. Harassment and Research
Participants
Researchers do not condone or subject
research participants to harassment,
sexual or otherwise.
H.3.d. Potentially Beneficial
Interactions
When a nonprofessional interaction
between the researcher and the
research participant may be potentially
beneficial, the researcher must
document, prior to the interaction
(when feasible), the rationale for such
an interaction, the potential benefit,
and anticipated consequences for the
research participant. Such interactions
should be initiated with appropriate
consent of the research participant.
Where unintentional harm occurs
to the research participant due to
the nonprofessional interaction, the
researcher must show evidence of an
attempt to remedy such harm.
H.4. Reporting Results
H.4.a. Accurate Results
Career professionals plan, conduct,
and report research accurately. They
provide thorough discussions of the
limitations of their data and alternative
hypotheses. Career professionals do
not engage in misleading or fraudulent
research, distort data, misrepresent
data, or deliberately bias their results.
They explicitly mention all variables
and conditions known to the
investigator that may have affected
the outcome of a study or the
interpretation of data. They describe
the extent to which results are
applicable for diverse populations.
H.4.b. Obligation to Report
Unfavorable Results
Career professionals report the results
of any research of professional value.
Results that reflect unfavorably on
institutions, programs, services,
prevailing opinions, or vested interests
are not withheld.
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 24 •
H.4.c. Reporting Errors
If career professionals discover
significant errors in their published
research, they take reasonable steps
to correct such errors in a correction
erratum, or through other appropriate
publication means.
H.4.d. Identity of Participants
Career professionals who supply data,
aid in the research of another person,
report research results, or make
original data available take due care
to disguise the identity of respective
participants in the absence of specific
authorization from the participants
to do otherwise. In situations where
participants self-identify their
involvement in research studies,
researchers take active steps to ensure
that data is adapted/changed to
protect the identity and welfare of all
parties and that discussion of results
does not cause harm to participants.
H.4.e. Replication Studies
Career professionals are obligated
to make available sufficient original
research data to qualified professionals
who may wish to replicate a study.
H.5. Publication
H.5.a. Recognizing
Contributions
When conducting and reporting
research, career professionals are
familiar with and give recognition to
previous work on the topic, observe
copyright laws, and give full credit to
those to whom credit is due.
H.5.b. Plagiarism
Career professionals do not plagiarize;
that is, they do not present another
person’s work as their own.
H.5.c. Review/Republication of
Data or Ideas
Career professionals fully
acknowledge and make editorial
reviewers aware of prior publication
of ideas or data where such ideas
or data are submitted for review or
publication.
H.5.d. Contributors
Career professionals give credit
through joint authorship,
acknowledgment, footnote statements,
or other appropriate means to those
who have contributed significantly to
research or concept development in
accordance with such contributions.
The principal contributor is listed first,
and minor technical or professional
contributions are acknowledged in
notes or introductory statements.
H.5.e. Agreement of
Contributors
Career professionals who conduct
joint research with colleagues or
students/supervisees establish
agreements in advance regarding
allocation of tasks, publication credit,
and types of acknowledgment that
will be received.
H.5.f. Student Research
Manuscripts or professional
presentations in any medium that
are substantially based on a student’s
course papers, projects, dissertations,
or theses are used only with the
student’s permission and list the
student as lead author.
H.5.g. Duplicate Submission
Career professionals submit
manuscripts for consideration to only
one journal at a time. Manuscripts
that are published in whole or in
substantial part in another journal or
published work are not submitted for
publication without acknowledgment
and permission from the previous
publication.
H.5.h. Professional Review
Career professionals who review
material submitted for publication,
research, or other scholarly purposes
respect the confidentiality and
proprietary rights of those who
submitted it. Career professionals use
care to make publication decisions
based on valid and defensible
standards. Career professionals
review article submissions in a
timely manner and based on their
scope and competency in research
methodologies. Career professionals
who serve as reviewers at the request
of editors or publishers make every
effort to review only materials that are
within their scope of competency and
use care to avoid personal biases.
Section I
Resolving Ethical
Issues
•••
Introduction
Career professionals behave in a legal,
ethical, and moral manner in the
conduct of their professional work.
They are aware that client protection
and trust in the profession depend on
a high level of professional conduct.
They hold other career professionals
to the same standards and are willing
to take appropriate action to ensure
that these standards are upheld.
Career professionals work to resolve
ethical dilemmas with direct and open
communication among all parties
involved and seek consultation with
colleagues and supervisors when
necessary. Career professionals
incorporate ethical practice into their
daily work. They engage in ongoing
learning and development regarding
current topics in ethical and legal
issues in the profession.
I.1. Standards and the
Law
I.1.a. Knowledge
Career professionals understand
the NCDA Code of Ethics and
other applicable ethics codes from
professional organizations or from
certification and licensure bodies of
which they are members and/or which
regulate practice in a state or territory.
Career professionals ensure that they
are knowledgeable of and follow
all applicable federal, state, local,
and/or institutional statutes, laws,
regulations, and procedures. Lack of
knowledge or misunderstanding of an
ethical responsibility is not a defense
against a charge of unethical conduct.
I.1.b. Conflicts Between Ethics
and Laws
If ethical responsibilities conflict with
laws, regulations, or other governing
legal authorities, career professionals
make known their commitment
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 25 •
to the NCDA Code of Ethics and
take steps to resolve the conflict. If
the conflict cannot be resolved by
acknowledging and discussing the
pertinent principles in the NCDA
Code of Ethics, career professionals
must adhere to the requirements of
all applicable federal, state, local,
and/or institutional statutes, laws,
regulations, and procedures.
I.2. Suspected Violations
I.2.a. Ethical Behavior Expected
Career professionals expect colleagues
to adhere to the NCDA Code of Ethics.
When career professionals possess
knowledge that raises doubts as to
whether another career professional
is acting in an ethical manner, they
take appropriate action, as noted in
I.2.b-I.2.g.
I.2.b. Informal Resolution
When career professionals have
reason to believe that another career
professional is violating or has violated
an ethical standard, they attempt
first to resolve the issue informally
with the other career professional if
feasible, provided such action does
not violate confidentiality rights that
may be involved.
I.2.c. Reporting Ethical
Violations
If an apparent violation has
substantially harmed, or is likely
to substantially harm, a person or
organization and is not appropriate for
informal resolution or is not resolved
properly, career professionals take
further action appropriate to the
situation. Such action might include
referral to state or national committees
on professional ethics, voluntary
national certification bodies, state
licensing boards, law enforcement
or other appropriate institutional
authorities. This standard does not
apply when an intervention would
violate confidentiality rights or
when career professionals have been
retained to review the work of another
career professional whose conduct is
in question.
I.2.d. Consultation
When uncertain as to whether a
particular situation or course of action
may be in violation of the NCDA Code
of Ethics, career professionals consult
with others who are knowledgeable
about ethics and the NCDA Code of
Ethics, with colleagues, and/or with
appropriate authorities.
I.2.e. Organizational Conflicts
If the demands of an organization
with which career professionals
are affiliated pose a conflict with
the NCDA Code of Ethics, career
professionals specify the nature of
such conflicts and express to their
supervisors or other responsible
officials their commitment to the
NCDA Code of Ethics. When possible,
career professionals work toward
change within the organization to
allow full adherence to the NCDA Code
of Ethics. In doing so, they are mindful
of and address any confidentiality
issues.
I.2.f. Unwarranted Complaints
Career professionals do not initiate,
participate in, or encourage the filing
of ethics complaints that are made
with reckless disregard or willful
ignorance of facts that would disprove
the allegation.
I.2.g. Unfair Discrimination
Against Complainants and
Respondents
Career professionals do not deny
employment, advancement, admission
to academic or other programs, tenure,
or promotion to anyone based solely
upon their having made or their being
the subject of an ethics complaint. This
does not preclude taking action based
upon the outcome of such proceedings
or considering other appropriate
information.
I.3. Cooperation with
Ethics Committees
Career professionals assist in the
process of enforcing the NCDA Code of
Ethics. Career professionals cooperate
with investigations, proceedings, and
requirements of the NCDA Ethics
Committee or ethics committees of
other duly constituted associations or
licensing/certifications boards having
jurisdiction over those charged with
a violation. Career professionals
are familiar with the NCDA Policy
and Procedures for Processing
Complaints of Ethical Violations and
use it as a reference for assisting in
the enforcement of the NCDA Code of
Ethics.
• 1 •
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 26 •
NOTE: NCDA has members in various career services
positions (see Career Professionals), as well as in
instructional (counselor educators, counseling psychology
professors, etc.) and supervisory roles (Director, Associate
Director, Career Supervisor, etc.). The term “career
professional” will be used throughout this document both
as a noun and as an adjective to refer to anyone holding
NCDA membership and who is therefore expected to abide
by these ethical guidelines.
Advocacy – promotion of the well-being of individuals
and groups, and the career counseling profession within
systems and organizations. Advocacy seeks to remove
barriers and obstacles that inhibit access, growth, and
development.
Assent – to demonstrate agreement, when a person is
otherwise not capable or competent to give formal
consent (e.g., informed consent) to a career counseling
service or plan.
Career Counselor – a professional (or a student who is a
career counselor-in-training) with an advanced degree
(master’s or doctoral level) in counselor education,
counseling psychology or closely related counseling
degree, engaged in a career counseling practice or
other career counseling-related services. Career
counselors fulfill many roles and responsibilities such
as career counselor educators, researchers, supervisors,
practitioners, and consultants.
Career Professionals – this term includes career counselors,
career coaches, career consultants, career development
facilitators, and anyone else who is a member of NCDA
and provides career counseling, career advice/advising,
career coaching, career planning, job search assistance,
and/or related services.
Career Services – all activities delivered by career
professionals to individuals, groups and organizations.
Services may include, but are not necessarily limited
to, career counseling, career planning, assessment, job
search assistance, skills practice, workshops and training,
homework assignments, bibliographies, journaling, and
overall career program development.
Career Services Plan – a document created by a career
professional and a client that outlines goals, steps, time
frames and outcome measures whereby a client can
learn and apply an orderly process for reaching career
goals.
Client(s) – individuals seeking or referred to the services of
a career professional.
Confidentiality – the ethical duty of counselors to protect
a client’s identity, identifying characteristics, and private
communications.
Consultation – a professional relationship that may include,
but is not limited to seeking advice, information, and/or
testimony.
Culture – membership in a socially constructed way of
living, which incorporates collective values, beliefs,
norms, boundaries, and lifestyles that are co-created
with others who share similar worldviews comprising
biological, psychosocial, historical, psychological, and
other factors.
Discrimination – the prejudicial treatment of an individual
or group based on their actual or perceived membership
in a particular group, class, or category.
Diversity – the similarities and differences that occur within
and across cultures, and the intersection of cultural and
social identities.
Educator – a professional engaged in developing,
implementing, and supervising the educational
preparation of students and/or supervisees.
Forensic Evaluation – the process of forming professional
opinions for court or other legal proceedings, based on
professional knowledge and expertise and supported by
appropriate data.
Informed Consent – a process of information sharing
associated with possible actions clients may choose
to take, aimed at assisting clients in acquiring a full
appreciation and understanding of the facts and
implications of a given action or actions.
Multicultural/Diversity Competence – career professionals
cultural and diversity awareness and knowledge about
self and others, and how this awareness and knowledge
is applied effectively in practice with clients and client
groups.
Multiple Relationships – relationships and/or interactions
with clients, students, supervisees, and/or research
participants that involve the career professional in
more than one professional role or a combination of
professional and nonprofessional roles.
Pro bono publico – contributing to society by devoting a
portion of professional activities for little or no financial
return (e.g., speaking to groups, sharing professional
information, offering reduced fees).
Professional Relationship – a relationship in which the
roles of client and career professional are defined,
activities and services are selected, and fees are charged
to a client, an employer, or a referring organization.
Social Media – technology-based platforms for
communication of ideas, beliefs, personal histories, etc.
(e.g., social networking sites, blogs).
Student – an individual engaged in formal educational
preparation as a career professional.
Glossary of Terms
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 27 •
References
NCDA Code of Ethics Preamble . . . . . . . . . 3
NCDA Code of Ethics Purpose . . . . . . . . . . 4
Section A: The Professional
Relationship. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Section A: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.1. Welfare of Those Served by Career
Professionals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.1.a. Primary Responsibility . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.1.B. Differentiation Between Types
of Services Provided . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.1.c. Records and Documentation . . . . . 3
A.1.d. Career Services Plans . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.1.e. Support Network Involvement . . . 3
A.2. Informed Consent in the
Professional Relationship . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.2.a. Informed Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.2.b. Types of Information Needed . . . . 3
A.2.c. Developmental and Cultural
Sensitivity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
A.2.d. Inability to Give Consent . . . . . . . . 4
A.2.e. Mandated Clients. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.3. Clients Served by Others . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.4. Avoiding Harm and Imposing
Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.4.a. Avoiding Harm. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.4.b. Personal Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.5. Roles and Relationships with
Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.5.a. Current Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.5.b. Former Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.5.c. Nonprofessional Interactions or
Relationships (Other Than Sexual
or Romantic Interactions or
Relationships). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.5.d. Potentially Beneficial
Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
A.5.e. Role Changes in the
Professional Relationship . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.5.f. Other Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.6. Roles and Relationships at Individual,
Group, Institutional,
and Societal Levels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.6.a. Advocacy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.6.b. Confidentiality and Advocacy . . . . 5
A.7. Multiple Clients. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.8. Group Work. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.8.a. Screening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.8.b. Protecting Clients. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.9. Fees and Business Practices. . . . . . . . 5
A.9.a. Self- Referrals and Unacceptable
Business Practices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.9.b. Establishing Fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.9.c. Nonpayment of Fees . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
A.9.d. Bartering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
A.9.e. Receiving Gifts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
A.10. Termination and Referral. . . . . . . . . 6
A.10.a. Abandonment Prohibited . . . . . . . 6
A.10.b. Inability to Assist Clients . . . . . . . 6
A.10.c. Appropriate Termination . . . . . . . 6
A.10.d. Appropriate Transfer of
Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Section B: Confidentiality, Privileged
Communication, and Privacy . . . . . . . 6
Section B: Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
B.1. Respecting Client Rights. . . . . . . . . . . 6
B.1.a. Multicultural/Diversity
Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
B.1.b. Respect for Privacy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
B.1.c. Respect for Confidentiality . . . . . . . 6
B.1.d. Explanation of Limitations . . . . . . . 7
B.2. Exceptions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.2.a. Danger and Legal Requirements . . 7
B.2.b. Contagious, Life-Threatening
Diseases. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.2.c. Court- Ordered Disclosure. . . . . . . . 7
B.2.d. Minimal Disclosure . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.3. Information Shared With Others. . . . 7
B.3.a. Subordinates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.3.b. Treatment Teams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Index
Supervisee – a career professional or student whose career
services work and/or clinical skill development is being
overseen in a formal supervisory relationship by a
qualified trained professional.
Supervision – a process in which one individual, usually
a senior member of a given profession designated as the
supervisor, engages in a collaborative relationship with
another individual or group, usually a junior member(s)
of a given profession designated as the supervisee(s) in
order to (a) promote the growth and development of the
supervisee(s), (b) protect the welfare of the clients seen
by the supervisee(s), and (c) evaluate the performance of
the supervisee(s).
Supervisor – A career professional who is trained to oversee
career services and engages in a formal relationship
with a practicing career professional or a student for the
purpose of ensuring quality career services work and/or
clinical skill development.
Working Relationship – a current agreement between
a career professional and a client in which the roles,
responsibilities and activities of both career professional
and client are clearly defined.
American Counseling Association’s Ethics Code: http://www.counseling.org/knowledge-center/ethics
An Ethical Decision-making Model: http://www.ethics.org/resource/plus-decision-making-model
Ethical Principles of Psychologists: https://www.apa.org/ethics/code/index.aspx
National Association of Colleges and Employers Ethics: https://www.naceweb.org/knowledge/ethics.aspx
Use of Human Research Participants: http://www.hhs.gov/ohrp/index.html (see Policy and Guidance)
Makela, J. P. (2009) A Case Study Approach to Ethics in Career Development: Exploring Shades of Gray.
Broken Arrow, OK: NCDA
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
• 28 •
B.3.c. Confidential Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.3.d. Third- Party Payers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.3.e. Transmitting Confidential
Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.3.f. Deceased Clients . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.4. Groups and Families . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.4.a. Group Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.4.b. Providing Career Services to
Multiple Family Members . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.5. Clients Lacking Capacity to Give
Informed Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
B.5.a. Responsibility to Clients . . . . . . . . . 7
B.5.b. Responsibility to Parents and
Legal Guardians. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.5.c. Release of Confidential
Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6. Records and Documentation . . . . . . . 8
B.6.a. Creating and Maintaining
Confidential Records and
Documentation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6.b. Permission to Record . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6.c. Permission to Observe . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6.d. Client Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6.e. Assistance with Records . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6.f. Disclosure or Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . .
B.6.g. Storage and Disposal After
Termination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.6.h. Reasonable Precautions. . . . . . . . . . 8
B.7. Research and Training . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.7.a. Institutional Approval . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.7.b. Adherence to Guidelines . . . . . . . . . 8
B.7.c. Confidentiality of Information
Obtained in Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
B.7.d. Disclosure of Research
Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
B.7.e. Agreement for Identification. . . . . . 9
B.8. Consultation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
B.8.a. Agreements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
B.8.b. Respect for Privacy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
B.8.c. Disclosure of Confidential
Information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Section C: Professional Responsibility . 9
Section C: Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
C.1. Knowledge of and Compliance
with Standards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
C.2. Professional Competence. . . . . . . . . . 9
C.2.a. Boundaries of Competence. . . . . . . 9
C.2.b. New Specialty Areas of Practice . . 9
C.2.c. Qualified for Employment . . . . . . . 9
C.2.d. Monitor Effectiveness . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.2.e. Consultation on Ethical
Obligations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.2.f. Continuing Education . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.2.g. Impairment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.2.h. Incapacitation, Death, or
Termination of Practice . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.3. Advertising and Soliciting Clients . 10
C.3.a. Accurate Advertising. . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.3.b. Testimonials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.3.c. Statements by Others . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.3.d. Recruiting Through
Employment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.3.e. Products and Training
Advertisements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.3.f. Promoting to Those Served . . . . . . 10
C.4. Professional Qualifications . . . . . . . 10
C.4.a. Accurate Representation . . . . . . . . 10
C.4.b. Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.4.c. Educational Degrees . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.4.d. Implying Doctoral-Level
Competence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
C.4.e. Program Accreditation Status. . . . 11
C.4.f. Professional Membership . . . . . . . 11
C.5. Nondiscrimination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.6. Public Responsibility . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.6.a. Sexual Harassment. . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.6.b. Reports to Third Parties . . . . . . . . 11
C.6.c. Media Presentations. . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.6.d. Exploitation of Others . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.6.e. Scientific Bases for Treatment
Modalities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.6.f. Contributing to the Public Good (Pro
Bono Publico) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.7. Responsibility to Other
Professionals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.7.a. Personal Public Statements . . . . . . 11
C.8. Policies and Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . 11
C.8.a. Creating and Maintaining Policy
Statements and Guidelines. . . . . . . . . 11
Section D: Relationships with Other
Professionals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Section D: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1. Relationships with Colleagues,
Employers, and Employees . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.a. Different Approaches . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.b. Forming Relationships . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.c. Interdisciplinary Teamwork . . . . . 12
D.1.d. Confidentiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.e. Establishing Professional and
Ethical Obligations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.f. Personnel Selection and
Assignment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.g. Employer Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.h. Negative Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.1.i. Protection from Punitive Action. . 12
D.2. Coaching and Consultation. . . . . . . 12
D.2.a. Coaching and Consultant
Competency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
D.2.b. Understanding Consultees. . . . . . 12
D.2.c. Coach/Consultant Goals . . . . . . . . 12
D.2.d. Informed Consent in Coaching
and Consultation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Section E: Evaluation, Assessment, and
Interpretation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Section E: Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.1. General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.1.a. Assessment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.1.b. Client Welfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.2. Competence to Use and Interpret
Assessment Instruments. . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.2.a. Limits of Competence . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.2.b. Appropriate Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.2.c. Decisions Based on Results . . . . . . 13
E.3. Informed Consent in Assessment . . 13
E.3.a. Explanation to Clients . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.3.b. Recipients of Results . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.4. Release of Data to Qualified
Professionals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.5. Diagnosis and Recommendations. . 13
E.5.a. Proper Diagnosis and
Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
E.5.b. Cultural Sensitivity . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.5.c. Historical and Social Prejudices
in Diagnosis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.5.d. Refraining From Diagnosis. . . . . . 14
E.6. Instrument Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.6.a. Appropriateness of Instruments. . 14
E.6.b. Referral Information . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.7. Conditions of Assessment
Administration. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.7.a. Administration Conditions . . . . . . 14
E.7.b. Technological Administration . . . 14
E.7.c. Unsupervised Assessments. . . . . . 14
E.7.d. Provision of Favorable
Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.8. Multicultural Issues/Diversity in
Assessment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.9. Scoring and Interpretation of
Assessments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.9.a. Reporting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.9.b. Research Instruments. . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.9.c. Assessment Services . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
E.10. Assessment Security . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
E.11. Obsolete Assessments and
Outdated Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
E.12. Assessment Construction . . . . . . . . 15
E.13. Forensic Evaluation: Evaluation
for Legal Proceedings . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15
E.13.a. Primary Obligations . . . . . . . . . . . 15
E.13.b. Consent for Evaluation . . . . . . . . 15
E.13.c. Client Evaluation Prohibited. . . . 15
E.13.d. Avoid Potentially Harmful
Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Section F: Providing Career Services
Online, Technology, and
Social Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Section F: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
F.1. Knowledge and Legal
Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
F.1.a. Knowledge and Competency . . . . 15
F.1.b. Laws and Statutes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
F.1.c. Outside Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
F.2. Informed Consent and Security. . . . 16
F.2.a. Informed Consent and Disclosure 16
F.2.b. Confidentiality and Limitations . . 16
F.2.c. Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
F.3. Client Verification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
F.4. Providing Career Services Online . . 16
F.4.a. Benefits and Limitations . . . . . . . . 16
F.4.b. Professional Boundaries in
Providing Career Services Online . . . 16
F.4.c. Technology-Assisted Services . . . . 16
• NCDA Code of Ethics •
F.4.d. Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
F.4.e. Communication Differences in
Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
F.4.f. Use of Assessments via
Electronic Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.5. Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.6. Web Maintenance and Technology
Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.6.a. Maintaining Websites and
Technology Resources. . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.6.b. Multicultural and Disability
Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.6.c. Qualifications of the Developer
or Provider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.6.d. Managing Job Posting and
Searching Websites or Databases . . . 17
F.7. Social Media . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.7.a. Creating and Maintaining a
Virtual Professional Presence . . . . . . 17
F.7.b. Separating Professional
Presence from Personal Presence . . . 17
F.7.c. Identifying Professional Roles
and Expertise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
F.7.d. Maintaining Confidentiality in
Virtual Spaces. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
F.7.e. Respect Privacy of Clients’
Virtual Presence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
F.7.f. Social Media as Part of Informed
Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
F.7.g. Social Media Policies and Fair
and Equitable Treatment . . . . . . . . . . .18
F.7.h. Permanence of Information,
Accuracy, and Audience . . . . . . . . . . . 18
F.7.i. Respect Copyright and Original
Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
F7.j. Educating Clients about the
Role of Social Media in the Career
Development Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Section G: Supervision, Training,
and Teaching . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Section G: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
G.1. Client Welfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
G.1.a. Client Welfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
G.1.b. Credentials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
G.1.c. Informed Consent and Client
Rights. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
G.2. Supervisor Competence . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.2.a. Supervisor Preparation . . . . . . . . . 19
G.2.b. Multicultural Issues/Diversity
in Supervision . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.2.c. Online Supervision . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.3. Multiple Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.3.a. Relationship Boundaries . . . . . . . . 19
G.3.b. Sexual Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.3.c. Harassment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.3.d. Close Relatives and Friends . . . . . 19
G.3.e. Potentially Beneficial
Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.3.f. Relationships with Former
Supervisees/Students . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.4. Supervisor Responsibilities . . . . . . . 19
G.4.a. Informed Consent for
Supervision. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.4.b. Emergencies and Absences. . . . . . 19
G.4.c. Standards for Supervisees. . . . . . . 19
G.4.d. Termination of the Supervisory
Relationship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
G.5. Student Responsibilities and
Evaluation, Remediation, and
Endorsement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
G.5.a. Ethical Responsibilities . . . . . . . . . 20
G.5.b. Impairment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
G.5.c. Professional Disclosure . . . . . . . . . 20
G.5.d. Evaluation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
G.5.e. Limitations and Remediation. . . . 20
G.5.f. Multiple Roles/Relationships
with Students and Supervisees . . . . . 20
G.5.g. Endorsement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
G.6. Responsibilities of Educators . . . . . 20
G.6.a. Educators. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
G.6.b. Integration of Study and
Practice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.6.c. Teaching Ethics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.6.d. Peer Relationships . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.6.e. Innovative Theories and
Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.6.f. Field Placements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.7. Student Welfare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.7.a. Orientation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.7.b. Self-Growth Experiences . . . . . . . 21
G.8. Multicultural/Diversity
Competence in Education and
Training Programs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.8.a. Faculty Diversity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.8.b. Student Diversity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
G.8.c. Multicultural/Diversity
Competence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Section H: Research and Publication . . 22
Section H: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
H.1. Research Responsibilities . . . . . . . . 22
H.1.a. Use of Human Research
Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
H.1.b. Need for Research and Review . . 22
H.1.c. Deviation from Standard
Practice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
H.1.d. Independent Researchers . . . . . . . 22
H.1.e. Precautions to Avoid Injury . . . . . 22
H.1.f. Principal Researcher
Responsibility. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
H.1.g. Minimal Interference. . . . . . . . . . . 22
H.1.h. Multicultural/Diversity
Considerations in Research . . . . . . . . 22
H.2. Rights of Research Participants . . . 22
H.2.a. Informed Consent in Research. . . 22
H.2.b. Deception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
H.2.c. Student/Supervisee
Participation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.2.d. Client Participation . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.2.e. Confidentiality of Information. . . 23
H.2.f. Persons Not Capable of Giving
Informed Consent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.2.g. Commitments to Participants . . . 23
H.2.h. Explanations After Data
Collection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.2.i. Informing Sponsors . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.2.j. Disposal of Research Documents
and Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.3. Relationships with Research
Participants (When Research Involves
Intensive or Extended Interactions) . 23
H.3.a. Nonprofessional Relationships . . 23
H.3.b. Relationships with Research
Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.3.c. Harassment and Research
Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.3.d. Potentially Beneficial
Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.4. Reporting Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.4.a. Accurate Results. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.4.b. Obligation to Report
Unfavorable Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
H.4.c. Reporting Errors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.4.d. Identity of Participants . . . . . . . . . 24
H.4.e. Replication Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5. Publication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5.a. Recognizing Contributions. . . . . . 24
H.5.b. Plagiarism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5.c. Review/Republication of Data
or Ideas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5.d. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5.e. Agreement of Contributors . . . . . 24
H.5.f. Student Research . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5.g. Duplicate Submission . . . . . . . . . . 24
H.5.h. Professional Review . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Section I: Resolving Ethical Issues . . . . 24
Section I: Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
I.1. Standards and the Law . . . . . . . . . . . 24
I.1.a. Knowledge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
I.1.b. Conflicts Between Ethics
and Laws. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
I.2. Suspected Violations . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
I.2.a. Ethical Behavior Expected . . . . . . . 25
I.2.b. Informal Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
I.2.c. Reporting Ethical Violations . . . . . 25
I.2.d. Consultation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
I.2.e. Organizational Conflicts . . . . . . . . . 25
I.2.f. Unwarranted Complaint . . . . . . . . . 25
I.2.g. Unfair Discrimination Against
Complainants and Respondents . . . . 25
I.3. Cooperation with Ethics
Committees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Glossary of Terms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
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