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Using Law and Ethics in Behavioral Health Decision Making
Through our Mental Health Blog
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Your Practice Dilemma or Question Today!

We invite your submission of questions and practice dilemmas through the CONTACT US page. We also invite your comments and feedback concerning the practice dilemmas we post on the PRACTICE DILEMMAS page.

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Mental Health Law Using Behavioral Health Decision Making
What We Offer

The purpose of this website is to promote the discussion of legal and ethical dilemmas and problems in the mental health professions, including social work, psychology and counseling. We welcome the posting of specific practice questions in these fields, and we will attempt both to post examples of troublesome dilemmas and to respond to individual questions from users.

For the mental health clinician facing practice dilemmas, this is the place to be. In discussing and answering questions about legal and ethical problems in social work, psychology, counseling, nursing, and other mental health and behavioral health professions, we aim to foster discussion of practice dilemmas. In doing so, we will not use the disjointed approach so common to law and ethics treatises. Rather, we will try to consider the law, ethics, cultural context, and pragmatics of dilemmas posted on this site. We hope to increase visitors' understanding of their own responsibilities to their clients in the resolution of common practice problems.

Andrew Israel, MSW, JD, the webmaster of this site, received his Juris Doctor degree from Syracuse University College of Law where he served as lead articles editor of the Syracuse Law Review. He is Associate Professor at New Mexico Highlands University School of Social Work and served as Associate Dean between 2005 and 2010. Since 2017, he has served as Director/Chair and Professor at Eastern Washington University School of Social work. Professor Israel is a past director of the State Bar of New Mexico Section on Public Law. He presently teaches courses in law and ethics and community organizing and has published in this field.

Mental Health Law Using Behavioral Health Decision Making

 

 

Mental Health Law Using Behavioral Health Decision Making