Dual Relationship In Social Work

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When working with a client, we have to get the client and family to engage in their treatment plan. After the engaging is the assessment and collecting of data from the client and family about what is going on with the patient. When this part is done, then is intervention, which is finding ways to help the client. Once the intervention is done, is the evaluation to see whether the solution that was reach worked, and along with the evaluation is the follow-up. The follow-up is necessary because it allows us to call the patient/family to check and make sure that the solution that was reached is still working and if it is not, it allows for the social worker, patient, and client’s family to make modifications to the solution. LifeCare utilizes …show more content…
A dual relationship is defined as "is used to refer to any situation where multiple roles exist between a professional and a recipient of care" (Crowden, 2010, p. 68). This occurs even in my agency because some of the patients that we see, we sometimes tend to run into the same patients outside the workplace and when this happens, some of them want to find out information and we have to let them know that we cannot give out information that they are looking for outside of the office. Sometimes we have patients that do not want members of their family to know what is going on with them and when their family members hear something, they want to confirm and we cannot confirm or deny what they are saying. Sometimes we have family members as a patient and the employee wants to be involved in their family member's care plan and we have to let them know that they cannot because it going to lead to there being a conflict of interest and because of that some other person has to be in charge of taking care of that …show more content…
Confidentiality is a problem because as a small town, everybody likes to be on everybody's business, but as a professional, our job is to keep our patient's information private, not only for the patient's sake, but also for our own protection and The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). According to Anthony, Appari & Johnson (2014), "the HIPAA Privacy Rule sets national standards to protect individuals’ PHI held by health care providers like hospitals. The Privacy Rule mandates safeguards to protect the privacy of PHI, imposes limits and conditions on the uses and disclosures of PHI, and gives patients select the rights over their health information" ( p. 110). HIPAA law is very beneficial because it helps to protect the patients and their information. It gives them the right to dictate who can see their information and who cannot. This is crucial because HIPAA in especially in the health field because it helps to set rules and limitation over who can see and receive patient's information, whether the information is electronic, written, or it is oral. It allows patient’s privacy over their information and anyone who violates this rule is subject to face some serious consequences. Some of the consequences that these people may face for violating HIPAA is that they will be fired from their job, be asked to pay a certain amount of money and they may even face jail time depending on the