Mangione Lorraine, Forti Rosalind, Iacuzzi Catherine M
Department of Clinical Psychology, Antioch New England Graduate School, 40 Avon Street, Keene, NH 03431, USA.
Int J Group Psychother. 2007 Jan;57(1):25-40; discussion 49-59, 61-6. doi: 10.1521/ijgp.2007.57.1.25.
Endings in group psychotherapy are suffused with complexity and potential conflict, some of which entail ethical quandaries. Ethical issues attending endings in group therapy are explored through a discussion of informed consent, time and role boundaries, privacy and confidentiality, unplanned endings, therapist-initiated termination, and competence. Findings from an exploratory survey of members of the American Group Psychotherapy Association and clinical-ethical vignettes are presented to highlight these issues. Clinicians need to develop and maintain ethical fitness and awareness, including attunement to personal responses, to endings and loss.