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 Section 
7Mental Health Professionals with Mental Illness
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 Phyllis 
Chesler, in her book "Women and Madness," indicates victims report that 
the professionals who abused them were going through life crises or changes. If 
you recall Russ, the therapist that treated Mary, indicated he was unhappy with 
his marriage. 
 Chesler indicated one victim, who felt that her psychiatrist was 
too familiar during her first session with him, reported that "he kissed 
me, and asked if he could visit me on his way home." She cancelled any follow-up 
sessions and later discovered "the psychiatrist was in the process of a divorce."
 
 Josephine, whose female psychologist had recently gone through a marriage breakdown, 
confided, "She kept telling me that I was uptight about my body. So she suggested 
that we go to the nude swimming session at the YWCA together. Afterwards, she 
asked me back to her apartment."
 Perfunctory 
sex was a common experience with abusive professionals, as described by the 
nine women abused by therapists in the Chesler study. The professional appeared 
to be interested only in his or her own sexual needs, and had no interest in the 
emotional or sexual gratification of their patients or clients. ♦      Incest Victims Chesler 
states there is a tendency for professionals to abuse incest victims shortly after 
they disclose their abuse. This could be linked to a perception of the incest 
victim as having been "publicly deflowered" and therefore no longer 
deserving of protection or respect. Thus the mental health professional may view 
the incest victim as "fair game," and may excuse his or her seduction 
of the client by telling themselves that they cannot do the client any further 
harm.
 
 The abused child, trained  to please men, may engage in a kind of ritualized seductive behavior that arouses the professional and permits him to believe that 
the child has an adult desire for sex with him. Because the victim has low self-esteem 
and may believe that no man will care for him/her without a sexual relationship, the victim
may feel that sexual involvement with the professional is a necessary price to 
pay for his attention.
 ♦ Stone's 6 Types of  Sexually Abusive Mental Health Professionals Based 
on his clinical experience, Alan Stone proposed a typology of sexually abusive 
mental health professionals. Interestingly, Stone makes no mention of female 
therapists. We'll discuss his focus on male therapists later. The six types of 
therapists are as follows:
 1. The therapist who is middle-aged, 
depressed, and has problems in his own marriage. He usually gets involved with 
a younger female client, to whom he tells his troubles. Sometimes the client is 
led to believe that the therapist is contemplating divorcing his wife and marrying 
the client.
 2. The manipulative and sociopathic therapist is exploiting 
his position and its opportunities with a goal of self-gratification.
 3. The therapist who uses patients to satisfy perverse instincts. This group includes 
therapists who drug their patients into unconsciousness and then have sex with 
them. Unlike the other examples, this does not involve an exploitation of transference, 
of the patient's view of the therapist as a parent- like figure.
 4. The charming, expansive, grandiose therapist who wants to be loved by his female 
patients, particularly if they are young and attractive. He initiates hugging 
and kissing early in the therapy, and goes on from there.
 5. The 
therapist who sees himself as "progressive" and believes that this includes 
sexual contact with his patients.
 6. The introverted and withdrawn therapist who is very uncomfortable with interpersonal intimacy. If a patient 
appears to be intensely sexually attracted to him, he succumbs. He may contend 
that the patient seduced him, but is likely to feel guilty and will probably confess.
 ♦ Schoener's 6 Types of Sexually Exploitative Therapists Another 
typology of sexually exploitative therapists, again with six categories, has 
been developed by Schoener and his associates at the Minnesota Walk-In Counseling 
Center. The clusters are as follows:
 1. Naive and uninformed: This 
group includes trainees and poorly trained therapists who may lack knowledge of 
professional standards and the importance of boundaries.
 2. Healthy 
or mildly neurotic: Minimal sexual contact or comprises in a single episode 
leading to remorse and requests for help are common.
 3. 
Severely neurotic: This group has severe, long-standing emotional problems 
and focus on getting their personal needs met in the work setting. As intimacy 
grows in a therapeutic relationship, these therapists play seductive games, talk 
about themselves, use touch excessively, and arrange business or social involvements 
outside counseling.
 4. Character disorders with impulse control problems: 
These therapists have a variety of problems which may include legal difficulties; 
they have little or no appreciation of the effect of their impulsive and inappropriate 
behavior on others, and tend to deny or minimize any harm they have caused.
 5. 
Sociopathic or narcissistic character disorders: These therapists are adept 
in manipulating clients and professional colleagues; they are cool and calculating, 
able to cunningly seduce a variety of clients and cover their tracks.
 6. 
Psychotic or borderline personality disorders: These therapists are more obviously 
mentally ill, with poor judgment and a tenuous grasp on reality.
 How 
do you feel after hearing this list of Stone's typology of sexually abusive mental 
health professionals? Do you feel a knot in your stomach right now? Is this material 
difficult for you to hear? I know for me it is because the thought of this existing 
in our profession is unthinkable. However, as stated at the beginning of this 
course, it is hoped that by bringing these "uncomfortable" professional 
imbalances to light, the veil of secrecy will be somewhat lifted from this emotionally 
charged area, which most have felt is not an actual issue to be considered for 
discussion today.Reviewed 2023
 
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
 Boyd, J. E., Zeiss, A., Reddy, S., & Skinner, S. (2016). Accomplishments 
of 77 VA mental health professionals with a lived experience of mental illness. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 86(6), 610–619.
 Elliott, M., & Ragsdale, J. M. (2020). Mental health professionals with 
  mental illnesses: A qualitative interview study. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 90(6), 677–686. Moody, K. J., Pomerantz, A. M., Ro, E., & Segrist, D. J. (2021). “Me too, a long time ago”: Therapist self-disclosure of past or present psychological problems similar to those of the client. Practice Innovations. Advance online publication.
 Spaulding, W. (2016). Introduction to the special section: Mental health professionals with mental illness. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 86(6), 603.
 Whitten, L. (2020). Stigma matters: An African American psychology 
professor comes out of the mental illness closet. Psychological Services. Advance online publication. QUESTION 
7What are the six categories listed in Schoener's typology of abuse (as referenced in Schoener, GR, Ph.D. (2001). Boundaries in Group Therapy: Ethical and Practice Issues. Women and Group Psychotherapy.  Builford Press. To select and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
 
 
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