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 Section 8Responding to Client Sexual Behaviors
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 In the last section, we discussed discuss training supervisees  in ten steps that can help a therapist cope with a client who might be at risk  for suicide. In this section, we will discuss sexual attraction to clients,  and determining appropriate levels of nonsexual physical contact with clients. You might consider playing this section for  your clinical supervisee early in your supervisor relationship, as a means to  open the discussion, should issues arise later.  I find it beneficial to provide my supervisees with the  following statistics regarding sexual attraction towards clients. You might  consider playing this section during one of your sessions.  As you may be aware, sexual attraction to clients is a  common occurrence. A national study by Pope found that 87% of therapists reported that they had experienced  attraction towards a client during their practice. The study found that this  was more commonly experienced by male therapists, 95% of whom experienced  attraction to a client. Attraction to clients was also common among female  therapists, 76 percent of whom had at one time felt attracted to a client.  However,  82% of these therapists reporting an experience of attraction noted that they  had never seriously considered engaging in sex with that client. I find by  providing this information up front, at the beginning of the supervisor  relationship, the topic becomes less taboo and the door has been opened for  future discussion. Pope’s study also found that 63% of therapists surveyed who  felt attraction to a client felt guilty, anxious, and confused because of the  attraction. Because of this, one fifth of the therapist kept the attraction a  complete secret, and did not mention the attraction to the client, to their  supervisor, or to their own therapists. However, over one fourth of these same therapists reported having  sexual fantasies about the client while engaging in sex with someone else.   ♦ Helping Supervisees Deal with Sexual Attraction to Clients Pope’s study also found that the topic of sexual attraction  towards clients was largely absent from graduate school, internship, and  supervision for the therapists in his study. Only 9% of those surveyed believed that they  received appropriate education and  preparation on the topic of attraction to clients.
 I feel that it is an ethical responsibility of  supervisors to provide training regarding attraction to clients.  To enhance training regarding attraction to  clients, I try to ensure that the supervisory relationship is a safe and  supportive environment in which these issues can be disclosed and discussed. I  also feel that it is important to tell my supervisees that it is not unethical to feel attracted to a  client, and is in fact a common experience. What is an important ethical  responsibility is to acknowledge and address the attraction right away, to act  carefully, and to take appropriate action to address the issue thoroughly.  3 Mechanisms for Helping Supervisees Deal with Sexual Attraction -- #1 consultation through supervision,
 -- #2 increasing formal supervision of the interaction with the  specific client, and
 -- #3 for the therapist to enter or reenter counseling.
 I also feel that it is necessary to discuss the issue of,  physical-contact with-clients, with my supervisees. As you know, many  therapists go to great lengths to ensure a complete absence of physical contact  with their clients, in case a physical touch might be misinterpreted. Take a  few seconds to assess where you are at regarding physical contact with your  clients. ♦ Appropriate Physical Contact One question I find my supervisees ask frequently is whether  there is a correlation between the nonsexual  touching of clients and the occurrence of therapist-client sexual intimacy. A study by Brodsky (Brode’-skee) found no  indication that nonsexual physical  contact with clients made physical sexual intimacy more likely. This study did find, however, that sexual intercourse with patients was associated with therapists who would engage in physical contact  with opposite-sex patients, but not engage  in physical contact with members of the same sex.
 I also feel that it is important to discuss openly with my  supervisees what may be considered appropriate physical contact with clients. Of course, it is important first to become familiar with state or organizational regulations  regarding physical contact. Outside of these guidelines, I explain to my  supervisees that there are three conditions for determining whether  therapist-client physical contact is appropriate.  3 Conditions for Determining if Physical Contact is Appropriate-- #1 If the therapist is personally comfortable with engaging  in nonsexual physical contact,
 -- #2 If the therapist maintains a theoretical orientation in  which therapist-client contact is appropriate, and
 -- #3 If the therapist has competence through training and  supervised experience in the use of touch.
 
 If these conditions regarding the appropriateness of  physical contact with clients are met, then the decision, clearly, hinges on the clinical needs of each individual client at  a particular moment. I explain to my supervisees that when, based upon clinical  needs and rational, touch can be caring, reassuring, and healing for a client.
 Obviously, when not based upon  clinical needs, even nonsexual touch  can be experienced by the client as intrusive, demeaning, or even frightening.  However, I realize many agencies have a no-touch policy, which may have legal  precedence in your state due to specific client-therapist sexual harassment  litigation. I have found that many clinical supervisees who have in the  past not had a chance to discuss and  explore the issues of nonsexual touch and sexual attraction to clients react in  two distinct ways. Here’s an example. My supervisee Danielle’s unresolved  concerns over client-therapist sexual intimacies resulted in her avoiding any  contact or physical closeness or proximity with her clients, often in an  exaggerated manner.  Via a two-way mirror observation, I noted Danielle’s unusual  distance from the client as she would clearly step far away in seeing her to  the door, so as to stay greater than an arm’s-length away from her client. You  might even say Danielle reacted in a phobic sort of fear.  However, my supervisee Trisha reacted counterphobically.  By that I  mean Trisha overcompensated for her fear of client contact.  I observed that Trisha engaged in handshaking  and nonsexual hugs excessively. Trisha stated, "by hugging my clients, they can  see that I’m comfortable with physical touching, and I don’t have any sexual impulses towards them!"  In addition to phobic avoidance of client contact and  counterphobic overcompensation; I have observed that if supervisees have unresolved concerns regarding sexual  attraction and physical intimacy, these concerns may result in the supervisee’s  focusing on sexual issues within sessions with their clients to an extent that  is not based on the client’s  clinical needs.  Think of a supervisee you are currently supervising, or  perhaps one you have supervised in the past. Would a discussion early in your  supervision relationship have been beneficial regarding the potential for over avoidance of physical contact; overuse of physical contact; or  inappropriate over emphasis of sexual issues during a session?   For  me, I find it is necessary to create an open place for discussion about these  issues with my supervisees in order to ethically, authentically, and  therapeutically respond  to unresolved  feelings and fears of sexual attraction to clients. In this section, we have discussed sexual attraction to  clients, determining appropriate levels of nonsexual physical contact with  clients, and ways supervisees might react to feelings or fears of sexual  attraction towards a client. These three reactions were over avoidance of physical contact, overuse of physical  contact, or inappropriate emphasis of sexual issues during a session.- Pope PhD, Kenneth S. and Melba J.T. Vasquez PhD; Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counseling: A Practical Guide for Psychologists; Jossey-Bass Publishers: California; 1991
 Reviewed 2023
 
 Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
 Aarts, H. (2019). Goal setting theory and the mystery of setting goals. Motivation Science, 5(2), 106–107.
 
 Amaro, C. M., Mitchell, T. B., Cordts, K. M. P., Borner, K. B., Frazer, A. L., Garcia, A. M., & Roberts, M. C. (2020). Clarifying   supervision expectations: Construction of a clinical supervision   contract as a didactic exercise for advanced graduate students. Training and Education in Professional Psychology, 14(3), 235–241.
 
 Summers, F. (2017). Sexual relationships between patient and therapist: Boundary violation or collapse of the therapeutic space? Psychoanalytic Psychology, 34(2), 175–181.
 
 Thompson, S. M. (2020). Responding to inappropriate client sexual behaviors: Perspectives on effective supervision. Journal of Psychotherapy Integration, 30(1), 122–129.
 QUESTION 8According to Pope’s study, 87% of therapists surveyed experienced sexual  attraction towards a client. What are three ways supervisees may react to  feelings or fears of sexual attraction towards a client? To select and enter your answer go to .
 
 
 
 
 
 
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