b. it is clear the client is no longer benefitting from counseling.
c. agency limits do not allow services to continue.
d. insurance benefits for mental health care have been exhausted.
e. the client experiences a crisis.
4. Because counselors have a fiduciary relationship with their clients, counselors must:
a. ensure their client’s finances are being handled properly.
b. protect the best interests of their clients and not benefit inappropriately from the
counselor-client relationship.
c. ensure that clients do what is best for themselves.
d. act as the client’s guardian if the client cannot care for himself or herself.
e. make arrangements for clients to be taken care of by family members or close friends
if their clients can no longer care for themselves.
5. It is vital for counselors to become aware of their own personal needs and values so that
they:
a. know which of their values they can encourage clients to adopt.
b. can avoid accepting clients who hold values that are different from their own values.
c. can avoid getting their own personal needs met through their counseling relationships.
d. can give clients advice that is congruent with the counselor’s value system.
e. can choose a counseling specialty that allows them to get their personal needs met
while providing counseling services to others.
6. When clients seek counseling related to issues such as abortion, assisted suicide, interracial
marriage, premarital sex, or sexual identity, counselors:
a. must accept such clients for counseling services even if these issues distress
counselors on a personal level.
b. must be able to rise above any personal feelings they have about such issues and have
an obligation to assist all clients who come to them for services.
c. must examine their own values regarding these issues to ensure they can provide
counseling services without allowing their own beliefs to interfere.
d. should immediately refer such clients to other counselors who specialize in
counseling persons with those particular concerns.
e. should accept such clients for counseling only if the counselor has experienced such
issues in his or her personal life and has successfully resolved them.
7. Regarding counselors’ personal values, counselors:
a. must always avoid disclosing their own personal values to their clients.
b. should avoid discussions of values if their own values conflict with those of their
clients.
c. could disclose their values to a client, if it is possible to do so in a way that conveys to
the client that the client’s values can be accepted or rejected without risking the
relationship.
d. could disclose their values to a client, but only if the counselor holds the same values
as the client.