How To Avoid Therapy Abuse

By Lucia Weeks


It is frustrating when your trust is violated by the therapist you thought would be the source of solace and good health. Common acts that should raise alarm include control, manipulation and exploitation. You should consider it therapy abuse if the things you will be engaged in are not in your best interest. A feeling of dependency beyond professional level should alert you that something is wrong.

Problems arise when dual relationships develop in the course of treatment. While the opinion and guidance of therapists is appreciated, it must respect professional ethics and boundaries. Adults are as vulnerable to abuse as children. Victims should take quick action to stop the situation from escalating. Alternative treatment is required lest the victim suffers due to confidence crisis.

Abusive professionals are both male and female. Sexual exploitation is the most common form with minors being at the greatest risk. Failure to report the cases or seek alternative assistance may send the victim to hospital due to depression with numerous cases of attempted suicide and actual suicide.

Before engaging a therapist, have a clear understanding of what you need. Follow your instincts or gut feeling and make quick decisions. If you do not have confidence in the actions of your current therapist, seek an alternative. A second opinion will also inform you of what to expect from a procedure.

It is easy to spot unprofessional conduct by your therapist. Therapists who discuss personal matters, sensitive topics and personal lives are unethical and possibly abusive. You should quit if the initial sessions feel violating and abusive. It prevents the situation from getting out of hand.

Some therapists make you feel humiliated, degraded, ashamed and intimidated. This will leave you feeling worse than when you sort their assistance. Suggestive and sexually erotic comments are a sign of unprofessional behavior. Engaging in kissing, hugging, winking and suggestive sexual behaviors indicates that something wrong is happening.

A therapist should not pressure you to make any decision or engage in an act that makes you feel uncomfortable. Calls, emails, text messages or meetings outside the office indicate unprofessional behavior and point to abusive relationships. Attention needs to be on your personality and achievements other than your dressing or looks. Comments like you are beautiful and sexy are the first steps towards abuse.

A therapist must maintain professional distance. Your vulnerability is likely to blind you into his or her trap. Focus should never shift to him instead of his professional services. The procedure should be standardized instead of appearing like only him or her has the solution to your problem. Do not feel anxious whenever you miss a session. If any anxiety crops up, it should be natural.

A close friend, spouse or parent should be the first person to run to. There are therapy exploitation websites and organization to help you overcome the challenge. The sites give you link to resourceful individuals or crucial information to help you deal with it. It is advisable to talk to another therapist. The legal channels available include reporting to the police, attorney as well as filing a complaint with his or her professional body. Even the slightest violation should be reported.




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