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Decisions concerning the evaluation and treatment
of any child are heavily embedded within the child's social and
cultural milieu, and are always the result of ongoing judgements
that are either made or not made by significant individuals in the
child's environment, usually parents and teachers.Reduction of uncertainty
is a requirement of any system of social intervention. Minimum ethical
standards must include determining whose objectives should the intervention
aspire to reach and keeping records that document the effectiveness
of treatment in achieving its objectives.
Adaptional difficulties that lead to referral frequently
reflect developmentally and/or situationally inappropriate or exaggerated
expressions of behavior that may at times also occur in children
who are not referred (Achenbach & Edelbrock, 1981). As a result,
decisions concerning the evaluation and treatment of any child are
heavily embedded within the child's social and cultural milieu,
and are always the result of ongoing judgments that are either made
or not made by significant individuals in the child's environment,
usually parents and teachers (Mash & Terdal, 1981, 1988).
The professionals who assess and serve children and
their families come from a variety of disciplines and backgrounds.
In addition, there is a default judgment in favor of problem identification
when a child is referred; for why else would such a referral be
made? Such variables in assessment are multiplied when a child's
difficulties are identified, leading to such questions as:
o Do the difficulties require intervention?
o What are the projected outcomes in the absence
of intervention?
o What outcomes do we want to achieve?
o Whose outcomes do we want to achieve?
o What interventions are likely to be most effective
in meeting intended outcomes?
o Are these interventions likely to be accepted by
the child/family?
o Who is the best person to provide the services?
o Is this person likely to be accepted by the child/family?
o When should interventions be initiated and when
terminated?
o Is the intervention having the desired impact?
Since the criteria for judging abnormality in children
are to a large extent social in nature. What constitutes a problem
and the likelihood of referral for treatment, will depend greatly
upon the norms and expectations of the individuals in the child's
environment (Mash, 1989). This factor leads to a secondary question
of "whose problem is it?" - for often we find that the offending
behavior is not universally offensive.
Such questions are not now well answered if the literature
is correct.
It would appear that most children who are in need
of psychological services do not receive them (Kazdin, 1988).
Estimates indicate that only 20% - 33% of children
with clinically significant disturbances actually receive treatment
(Knitzer, 1982), and that children with more severe dysfunctions
may be slightly less likely to receive help (Sowder, 1975).
On the other hand, the transient nature of many types
of psychological disturbances during childhood would suggest that
not all children exhibiting disorders are best served through the
provision of specialized psychological services (Mash, 1989).
As we review these perspectives regarding decision
making in regard to intervention, we are left with a certain amount
of uncertainty. Despite an extensive body of knowledge about human
growth and development, our attempts to help may be fraught with
the counterintuitive concerns articulated by Forrester - our attention
is drawn to the very place where intervention will make matters
worse.
Added to these difficulties, we are faced with the
fact that such intervention is not a monolithic, monomethodological
approach but incorporates widely diverse methods and techniques
with differential efficacy which has not consistently been documented
with such data collection that would measure meaningful outcomes.
The uncertainty is exponentially increased by the variation among
individuals - both clients and helpers and the impact of context
as it moderates the expression not only of behavior, but of cognition
and affect as well (Mash, 1989).
Reduction of this uncertainty is a requirement of
any system of social intervention. Minimum ethical standards must
include determining whose objectives should the intervention aspire
to reach and keeping records that document the effectiveness of
treatment in achieving its objectives.
The first of these ethical standards - determining
whose objectives should determine the goals of treatment is being
increasingly address by the introduction of self determination.
The strength of an individual's motivation is based on several constructs:
- expectancy: what is the probability that I will get what I
want?
- instrumentality: will the attainment of what I want satisfy
one or more of my needs?
- valence: is it worth the effort?
Since motivation is the critical variable in the
effectiveness of any intervention, it may be wise to following the
admonishment of Eduard Deming of Total Quality Management prominence:
it is the customer who defines quality. Thus an increasing requirement
is to turn away from a discernment of need toward a discernment
of preference. Needs are a determination made by "experts" which
often lead to counterproductive behaviors such as resistance or
defiance. Kanfer and Schefft (1998) have described resistance and
treatment noncompliance as representing a discrepancy between the
client's behavior and the therapist's expectations (Mash, 1989).
We would describe it more as a discrepancy between the clients goals
and the therapist's intentions. Motivation is never an issue when
we help people pursue their own preferential goals. Blechman (19850)
may have stated it best - Children with behavior problems deserve
more ... than training to conform to the demands of poorly functioning
homes and schools.
The increased emphasis on self-determination has
naturally led to a change in the nature of preferred interventions.
Self-management strategies which are directed at teaching such processes
as setting goals, evaluating norms and standards, monitoring and
evaluating problem situations, examining choices, anticipating outcomes,
employing self-reward and understanding the relationship between
cognitions, emotions and behavior are increasingly the interventions
of choice.
The second ethical standard, keeping records that
document the effectiveness in reaching objectives' is also impacted
by both Forrester's ¡uncertainty principle' - that we may make
matters worse and by the ¡preference principle' that if what
we do is not effective in meeting the customer's expectations we
are likely to discover a reduced motivation for participation and
an increase in resistance, defiance and non-compliance.
No entity can become a learning organism without
the time, energy and creative thinking required for collecting and
rigorously analyzing data. Our uncertainty should lead us to a clear
concept that the provision of services and supports is an experimental
services and that the ethical principles involving human subjects
[The Belmont Report] are appropriate guidelines. These guidelines
articulate three basic ethical principles generally accepted by
our cultural tradition as particularly relevant:
Respect for Persons - incorporates at least
two ethical convictions: 1) that individuals should be treated as
autonomous agents, and 2) that persons with diminished autonomy
are entitled to protection. The principle of respect for persons
thus divides into two separate moral requirements: the requirement
to acknowledge autonomy and the requirement to protect.
An autonomous person is an individual capable of
deliberation about personal goals and of acting under the direction
of such deliberation. To respect autonomy is to give weight to autonomous
persons' considered opinions and choices while refraining from obstructing
their actions unless they are clearly detrimental to others. To
show lack of respect for an autonomous agent is to repudiate that
person's considered judgments, to deny an individual the freedom
to act on those considered judgments, or to withhold information
necessary to make a considered judgment.
Thus the construct of self determination is supported
through adherence to the preferences of the autonomous person. One
cannot assume, however, that the need to protect overwhelms the
need to respect autonomy. Many people with severe disabilities which
require a degree protection are still quite capable of autonomous
decisions. If in no other way than resistance, they tell us of their
preferences and the expert helper is able to utilize this knowledge
to build informed decisions.
Beneficence - Persons are treated in an ethical
manner not only by respecting their decisions and protecting them
from harm, but also by making efforts to secure their well-being.
In this context, beneficence is understood as an obligation. Two
general rules apply: 1) do no harm and 2) maximize possible benefits
and minimize possible harms. The question of harm through lack of
self-determination, failure of inclusion or focus on disability
rather than competence are issues of concern to the helping process.
Blocking personal goals objectives can be as harmful as physical
attack. One need not support the method of achieving goals; only
the goal itself.
One cannot maximize possible benefits and minimize
harm unless one measures the impact of the intervention upon the
quality of life of the person being served. This requires that a
documentation of outcome data be utilized, not only to determine
whether the intervention worked, but whether it is working. Such
formative data is required so that modification of the intervention
can be made before harm is done.
Justice - An injustice occurs when some benefit
to which a person is entitled is denied without good reason or when
some burden is imposed unduly. The concept of justice regarding
social services are vital components of federal law of "least restrict
environment" and the question of justice arises whenever a child
is separated from a mainstream environment. One could surmise that
an injustice is potentially occurring when a person is non-compliant
for the discrepancy between the client and the helper allows for
potential error on either side.
Clearly if there is no harm to others, we are on
rather unsupportable ground to imply that the client is wrong for
as John Stuart Mill admonished - "The only purpose for which power
can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community,
against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either
physical or moral, is not a sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully
be compelled to do or forbear because it will be better for him,
because in the opinions of others, to do so would be wise, or even
right (On Liberty, 1859)". [Italics added] Thus the helper, no matter
how concerned for the consequences which may befall the client,
has no right to coerce compliance. Such coercion is not only unethical,
but it provides a model for the client which is inappropriate.
These principles clearly underline the necessity
for human service interventions to operate on the preferences of
their clients - except where harm to others or illegal activity
is concerned - and the need to document the effectiveness of intervention
activities. This requires a system of careful study and systematic
evaluation and supervised practice.
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