Anonymous wrote:My sibling wanted to see my psychiatrist. I told them it was fine and gave them the doctor's number. When the psychiatrist got a message from my sibling they called me first, before calling my sibling back, to see if I knew about it and to ask how I felt about it and to reassure that things remain confidential.
Did any of that happen? It probably should have. But the therapist isn't prohibited from taking your DH on as a client, they are just prohibited from revealing things you told them.
Anonymous wrote:Google “transference in therapy.” It’s almost like this is an emotional affair he is having with the therapist. Otherwise why wouldn’t he find a different one? It’s a very common phenomenon in therapy, especially when the therapist is of the sex that the patient is attracted to.
Anonymous wrote:Huh? It was a hypothetical. I never said she was telling my secrets. Odd that you are so hostile in your response.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it's been at least 4 years since she last saw you as a patient. I imagine there's some sort of time limit.
Is there? I thought the confidentiality never expired. Can she go tell all my secrets at a cocktail party just because ten years have passed? I didn’t think so
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it's been at least 4 years since she last saw you as a patient. I imagine there's some sort of time limit.
Is there? I thought the confidentiality never expired. Can she go tell all my secrets at a cocktail party just because ten years have passed? I didn’t think so
Anonymous wrote:Op here. DH does not want to start over with someone else and I guess feels like he connects with her (i think she tells him what she wants to hear and he likes that). I guess the bigger issue is that he does not see the issue, or care that it bothers me.
Anonymous wrote:So it's been at least 4 years since she last saw you as a patient. I imagine there's some sort of time limit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a therapist. This is unethical. This is a pretty classic definition of a dual relationship. While it is sometimes impossible to avoid some kind of dual relationship, this is one that it's totally possible to avoid. In this situation, my ethical interpretation is that your husband would ALWAYS be off limits to me as a client, regardless of whether you and I have terminated our relationship or not. That you are the only one who sees this problem is a huge red flag about both of these people.
The biggest issue here is your husband. Have you asked him directly to stop seeing your therapist? I actually would not assume that the therapist knows about the dual relationship and is cool with it. I think it's more likely that your husband came to therapy with her proactively and did not mention the dual relationship. She may know exactly who his wife is, but because of the confidentiality that she still must keep for you, she cannot discuss that with him. The ethical thing for her to do is to terminate the relationship with your husband and refer out due to an ethical conflict of interest.
If he refuses to stop seeing her, you are welcome to get in touch with her, bring the dual relationship formally to her attention, and tell her that you do not consent to any sharing of your information with your husband in session. You can request to revoke any kind of release that you signed about him when you were seeing her actively.
The fact that you need to do any of this suggests you have a lousy marriage partner.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a therapist. This is unethical. This is a pretty classic definition of a dual relationship. While it is sometimes impossible to avoid some kind of dual relationship, this is one that it's totally possible to avoid. In this situation, my ethical interpretation is that your husband would ALWAYS be off limits to me as a client, regardless of whether you and I have terminated our relationship or not. That you are the only one who sees this problem is a huge red flag about both of these people.
The biggest issue here is your husband. Have you asked him directly to stop seeing your therapist? I actually would not assume that the therapist knows about the dual relationship and is cool with it. I think it's more likely that your husband came to therapy with her proactively and did not mention the dual relationship. She may know exactly who his wife is, but because of the confidentiality that she still must keep for you, she cannot discuss that with him. The ethical thing for her to do is to terminate the relationship with your husband and refer out due to an ethical conflict of interest.
If he refuses to stop seeing her, you are welcome to get in touch with her, bring the dual relationship formally to her attention, and tell her that you do not consent to any sharing of your information with your husband in session. You can request to revoke any kind of release that you signed about him when you were seeing her actively.
Anonymous wrote:Did she ever see both of you together in the same session?
-therapist