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Journal Article

Citation

Johnson WB, Grasso I, Maslowski K. Mil. Med. 2010; 175(8): 548-553.

Affiliation

Department of Leadership, Ethics and Law, United States Naval Academy, Luce Hall, Stop 7B, Annapolis, MD 21402, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Association of Military Surgeons of the United States)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

20731257

Abstract

Military mental health providers routinely experience mixed-agency ethical dilemmas when obligations to patients and the military conflict. Particularly difficult mixed-agency dilemmas occur when a military psychiatrist, psychologist, or social worker encounters an apparent conflict between an ethical obligation--enumerated in a professional code of ethics--and a federal statute. This article explores ethical-legal conflicts for uniformed mental health providers. Three case vignettes illustrate situations in which military providers may find themselves stuck between incongruent ethical and legal demands. The authors conclude with several recommendations designed to prevent and resolve ethical-legal conflicts for military mental health providers.


Language: en

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