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 Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!! 
  
  
 
 Section 
6 
Parents’ Understanding of the Juvenile Dependency System 
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The  best answer is A. The question was, "what should be your first response?"  The possible case of abuse will need first to be verified. Once it is verified  the steps outlined in B, C, and D would  be considered. 
♦ What 
  Should Parents Know?  
  Parents  are legally responsible for their children, and consequently, they have a right  to know about them. Under the law, a person is regarded as a minor until he is  eighteen. And until that time (unless he is emancipated), the parents are  legally responsible for his care as well as his misdemeanors. In psychotherapy,  as you know however, psychological  age or the condition of the patient rather than  chronological age must determine the approach the therapist will have in  dealing with parents. 
   
  The  requirement that a school or a psychiatrist notify the parents of all minors  who consult the psychiatrist would destroy service at once. As a consequence,  university health services usually treat students as though they were adults. 
   
  Records  of the juvenile court are not open to public scrutiny. Under traditional juvenile court philosophy,  a veil of secrecy is drawn over its proceedings and records. 
These laws do not require  the reporting of "mental abuse," which is much more  devastating to the child. The percentage of such cases, serious in nature, can  well be imagined to be multifold the number of cases of physical abuse. 
   
  - Petrila, J., J.D., L.L.M., & Fader-Towe, H., J.D. (2010). Information Sharing in Criminal Justice-Mental Health Collaborations: Working with HIPAA and Other Privacy Laws. Council of State Governments Justice Center, 1-46. Retrieved from https://www.bja.gov/Publications/CSG_CJMH_Info_Sharing.pdf.. 
  Reviewed 2023   
   
  Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References: 
Cleveland, K. C., & Quas, J. A. (2018). Parents’ understanding of the juvenile dependency system. Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 24(4), 459–473. 
 
Dopp, A. R., Borduin, C. M., White, M. H. II, & Kuppens, S. (2017). Family-based treatments for serious juvenile offenders: A multilevel meta-analysis. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 85(4), 335–354. 
 
Goldstein, N. E. S., Gale-Bentz, E., McPhee, J., NeMoyer, A., Walker, S., Bishop, S., Soler, M., Szanyi, J., & Schwartz, R. G. (2019). Applying the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges’ resolution to juvenile probation reform. Translational Issues in Psychological Science, 5(2), 170–181. 
 
Gueta, K., Eytan, S., & Yakimov, P. (2020). Between healing and revictimization: The experience of public self-disclosure of sexual assault and its perceived effect on recovery. Psychology of Violence, 10(6), 626–637. 
 
QUESTION 
  6   
If  a woman admits during a counseling session that she is being abused by her  boyfriend, the therapist is obligated to do the following: 
  a. Report the incident to the proper authority with or without client  permission 
  b. Report the incident with client permission only 
  c. Assist the woman to become aware of services available to her in regard to  the abuse  
  d. Nothing is required of the therapis; It’s up to the woman to ask  To select and enter your 
  answer go to . 
        
 
 
     
     
    
    
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