A High Number Of Patients Suffer Emotional Abuse By A Psychotherapist

By Jocelyn Davidson


When there is sexual abuse in the psychotherapist-patient relationship, that patient suffers. This situation is caused by a professional with low ethical standards. The patient who suffers emotional abuse by a psychotherapist can take legal action.

Statistically speaking, approximately 4.4 percent of therapists admit to having sex with a client. The offending therapist is a male in four cases out of five. Those exploited are female in 88 to 92 percent of all reported cases. Some are minors.

This sexual abuse has a disturbing effect on someone who is already emotionally unstable. Fourteen percent try to kill themselves. One percent is successful at it. Over ten percent have to spend time in the hospital.

The patient who came to the unethical therapist with an unrelated disorder, can end up with clinical depression, anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder. The patient who comes forward and reports the abuse is courageous. It requires great strength to do so.

There is never a time when sex between the psychotherapist and patient is ethical. All states consider it to be malpractice at the very least. Many states call it criminal conduct prosecutable in a court of law.

The abused patient has three ways in which to respond. She file charges in criminal court. She can lodge a complaint with the state licensing board. She can also file a claim in civil court.

A civil court can award money for damages. Punitive damages may be added to punish the offender. The best way for the victim to proceed is to engage the services of an attorney. An attorney can give legal advice plus represent her in court as the case proceeds. The laws in each state may vary.

In court it becomes a matter of who said what. A defense attorney may use the tactic of calling the patient a liar and pointing out the fact that she is unstable. When a psychotherapist faces a similar charge multiple times he loses his credibility. A jury will not view him the same way if there have been previous incidents.

When a psychotherapist is brought up on charges, or brought before a review board multiple times, it does not indicate his innocence. Ethics in the area of therapist-patient sexual intimacy is not addressed adequately by The American Psychiatric Association. One female psychiatrist resigned from that august organization to protest the lack of concern.

Some professionals believe they are above the law. They show no restraint in initiating sex with a patient. Some are callous enough to claim it is good for the patient. Instead, they view it as unethical for a therapist to report another therapist for engaging in sex with a patient.

Such attitudes are in direct contrast to what most people would consider ethical behavior. Some of these professionals sit on committees of prominent organizations, are administrators of psychiatric institutions and are professors at major universities. Rehabilitation programs for those who are accused do not seem to have much effect on the perpetrators.

It was found that recidivism occurred among the therapists as often as the general population of sex offenders. The recidivism rate is very high. Education, economic status and social position do not seem to make any difference.




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