The New Informants

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228 pages 1995

About This Book

The authors, a therapist and a lawyer, document the erosion of psychotherapist-patient confidentiality caused by the reporting laws, by the requirements of managed care, and by other features of the contemporary culture of disclosure. They analyze the failure of organized psychology, psychiatry, and social work to sound the alarm about such invasions, a failure especially perplexing in light of judicial sympathy for the psychotherapist-patient privilege.

To the authors, psychotherapy without confidentiality is impossible. They propose important remedies for this clinical and ethical disaster.

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