Professional boundaries: Crossing a line or entering the shadows?

Mark Doel, Peter Allmark, Paul Conway, Malcolm Cowburn, Margaret Flynn, Pete Nelson, Angela Tod

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    This article explores the professional boundaries guidance for social workers. It presents research findings from the formal literature, from agency codes of practice, from telephone interviews with regulatory and professional bodies and from an exercise using 'snowballing techniques' in which informants responded to brief scenarios illustrating boundary dilemmas. The findings suggest that formal research plays little part in the guidance that individuals use to help them determine professional boundaries. Similarly, only 10-15 per cent of informants made regular reference to regulatory and professional codes of practice, with an even smaller percentage quoting specific sections from these codes. A slightly larger group (15-20 per cent) made fairly regular reference to their agency's policy documents. However, a clear majority relied on their own sense of what is appropriate or inappropriate, and made their judgements with no reference to any formal guidance. Agency guidance tended to ignore the ambiguous areas of practice and seemed to act as an insurance policy, brought out and dusted off when something goes awry. The authors caution against ever-increasing bullet points of advice and prescription, and advance a notion of ethical engagement in which professionals exercise their ethical senses through regular discussion of professional boundary dilemmas. © 2009 The Author.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1866-1889
    Number of pages23
    JournalBritish Journal of Social Work
    Volume40
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Sept 2010

    Keywords

    • code of practice
    • practice dilemmas
    • Professional boundaries
    • professional ethics
    • professional relationship

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