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Outside of those who work with or support victims of therapy abuse, this is an issue fraught with misperceptions.
Confusion around what therapy abuse is can leave us wondering how to separate the serial offender who preys on
clients from the therapist who might have made a mistake in the services they offer.
To start, let us examine what is not therapy abuse. In my opinion, it is not therapy abuse if a client
is unhappy with their progress or is experiencing a personal conflict. While it is malpractice when therapists
work beyond their skill level, make poor clinical decisions, and then fail to correct that mistake with
consultation, acknowledgement, and action, by this definition, is not therapy abuse. A therapist who falls
in love with a client has not committed therapy abuse. One who acts on those feelings and has sexual contact
with that client is, by definition and unequivocally, committing therapy abuse.
Therapy abuse is about exploitation.It is using patients to fulfill the needs and desires of the offending
therapist while pushing the best therapeutic interests of the client aside. Offenders groom their victims with the intent to exploit them financially, emotionally, psychologically, physically, and/or sexually with a direct
benefit for the professional.
Offenders often have more than one victim. Therapy abuse follows patterns of grooming and coercion
seen in other forms of abuse, to induce the victims' compliance, secure their silence, and, if necessary,
ensure a means to discredit disclosure.
In the mid-80s, we learned how child molesters groom their victims with flattery, the employment
of 'secrets,' labeling the relationship as speecial, insisting that no one would understand,
and encouraging role reversals: victim as caregiver and protector of the offender, i.e.,
"If you tell I will go to jail." We know child molesters use employment to gain access to victims,
including daycares, schools, camps, and churches. In intimate partner violence,
we learned how batterers groom and isolate their victims using a cycle of abuse to maintain control. For
battered spouses, the most dangerous time is when they leave. Since the #metoo movement emerged, we have been
confronted with a shocking number of adults who have been emotionally coerced into sexual activity by those,
such as employers, with authority.
As with teachers, priests, daycare attendants, it offends our sensibilities to see how therapists, who
are assumed to be helpful and compassionate, might use their power and authority over vulnerable clients
to exploit them for their own needs or benefit. Unfortunately, this profession is not free from being used
by serial offenders. Lack of resources, knowledge, and expertise, along with long-held social norms,
have left survivors largely silenced. That is changing.
Those who are trauma-informed will recognize the phases of therapy abuse:
The Grooming Phase in therapy abuse is well defined. It may start within the first few sessions but
can begin as early as the first consultation. It can go on for many years. The grooming phase mirrors
that of child molesters including calling the victim special, giving gifts, creating a sense of financial
indebtedness (e.g., misuse of pro bono), pushing boundaries around contact and touch, solidifying the
victim's sense of responsibility for the perpetrator's well-being ("You must keep this secret."),
creating a profound dependence on the therapist, setting up covert forms of communication, and isolating the victim
from family and friends.
The Exploitation Phase may take financial, physical, emotional, and/or sexual forms. The financial
exploitation of a victim may include but is not limited to buying property together, accepting financial
gifts, borrowing money, being designated as beneficiary of estates and/or insurance policies, or accepting
free services such as legal or administrative work. Physical exploitation may include free labour such
as renovating therapists' home or office, babysitting, running errands, and even serving as surrogates
for in vitro fertilization. Therapists employ role reversal and exploit clients emotionally depending on
them as sounding boards or for support. Sexual exploitation, the most obvious and easiest to define,
is any sexual interaction and includes talking about the therapist's own sex life to sexual touching and
intercourse. Many forms of exploitation may take place concurrently.
The Termination Phase generally occurs when the offender's interests wane, when the victim is asking
for change and/or confronting them on the exploitation, or when the offender feels at risk of exposure
. In the same way battered spouses are most at risk when leaving, so too may therapy abuse survivors
find themselves in precarious positions. In this phase, perpetrators may initiate a pre-contrived
defense strategy. Where other molesters or batterers might rely on threats of physical harm, abusive
therapists primarily employ emotional coercion or threats. This may start with soliciting a victim's
agreement to protect them with silence and the mutual destruction of evidence of transgressions including
but not limited to texts, emails, photos, gifts, therapy notes, etc. If they fear being formally reported,
whether to police or licensing boards, offenders rely on having groomed their victim to take responsibility
for their well-being while positioning themselves as the real victims. ("I only did this because of you." or
"My working with you has cost me.")
Perpetrators may plead for forgiveness and offer promises to reform.They may incessantly call, text,
email, or show up at their victims' homes or work hoping that access will help them regain control. If
all that is unsuccessful, they may turn to emotional violence to enforce their victims' silence. Their
assaults use the clients' secrets, vulnerabilities, and confidences disclosed in sessions to inflict fear
and grave emotional harm. The love and acceptance they once offered is now replaced with intentional triggering
of shame, guilt, abandonment, rejection, and threats of exposing secrets. Offenders may work to break up
clients' support systems. Those who offered pro bono arrangements may use it to disprove a professional
counseling relationship or claim consensual affairs. And if all else fails, they may assign a new diagnosis,
such as borderline personality disorder, to undermine their victims' self-confidence and discredit
their disclosures.
The damage done to victims of therapy abuse is likely catastrophic. During the grooming and exploitation
phases, healing is actively undermined, and victims are often faced with new issues such as insomnia, depression,
suicidal ideation, and anxiety. In the termination phase, victims struggle to regain a sense of self and may
end up losing friends, family, and partners/spouses. Emotionally overwhelmed, victims may be unable to work
and thus risk losing jobs, homes, and even child custody.
Victims often experience PTSD and the impact of Stockholm Syndrome while fielding both individual
and institutional victim-blaming. Potential healing relationships become triggering in ways that subsequent
mental health professionals may not understand.ictims may be accused of being vindictive, dangerous, and/or
lying. Add to that a popular culture which incorrectly depicts a sexual relationship between therapist and
client as 'romantic,' victims are often left grappling with what is and is not real. It is no wonder
that therapy abuse survivors engage in self-harm and are ten times more likely to attempt or commit suicide
than the general public.
Given this definition, it is easy to differentiate between the therapist who has made a mistake or has
misjudged the needs of their patient and the serial offender who grooms and then exploits their victims.
Because therapy abuse offenders exhibit the same patterns as child molesters, batterers, and other offenders,
those who are trauma-informed will recognize these patterns
Most recently, social media platforms have provided spaces for survivors to find each other,
compare notes, and get support. Websites, such as TELL, accessed by as many as 40,000 unique visitors
every year, offer on-line resources and opportunities for networking for those concerned about their therapy.
These resources for information and support are resulting in more survivors emerging empowered with knowledge
and healing opportunities. Consequently, the known number of survivors appears to be increasing exponentially
across the globe.
Mental health organizations, colleges, and licensing boards require their members to adhere to a Code of
Conduct or Ethics and/or Bylaws. Many of these include a standard or principle that allows for a sexual
relationship between therapist and client two to three years after termination. While such allowances, along
with their qualifying conditions, may seem, on the surface reasonable, those of us who work with survivors know
how these clauses too often open doors for opportunistic abusers. In addition, promises to a therapy abuse survivor of a future love relationship,
after the waiting period, allows offenders to move on with their lives while victims are left in limbo,
kept from forming healthier and appropriate relationships, and entrapped
Given what we know about the enormous dangers and damage done to victims, many educated, and
trauma-informed mental health professionals and organizations have recognized that the power imbalance
between therapist and client is akin to that of parent and child, and that it is life-long. Any sexual
activity is, therefore, unavoidably abusive. They recognize that there is no good reason for this type of
permissive principle or standard to be included in the codes of conduct/ethics or bylaws and are removing
and replacing them with ones that specifically preclude any sexual contact between therapist and former or
current clients.Changing these standards or principles in our mental health organizations goes a long way
towards making the mental health field a safer place for clients. The catastrophic damage that they suffer
behooves these institutions, if they haven't already, to do this as soon as possible.
There is no known way for clients to prevent therapy abuse from occurring. We can, however, arm them with
information that helps.
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Learn to recognize the red flags of therapy abuse
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Go over the checklist of therapy abuse to recognize experiences of therapy that appear abusive. This will also
provide information on proper boundaries in therapy
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Check reviews or disciplinary actions about the therapist and/or organization
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Know where the therapist was trained and where they are licensed
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Ask the therapist straight up what they know about therapy abuse and dual relationships and assess how it
aligns with this definition.
In and of itself, understanding what therapy abuse is, recognizing how mental health organizations might
enable it, and knowing the steps clients can take to protect themselves won't, overall, prevent therapy abuse.
However, they will raise awareness for clients and warn an abusive therapist that they are not dealing with
a client who can be naïvely coerced into taking part in transgressions or an organization that will look the
other way. Together, it may go a long way to interrupt therapy abuse from beginning or help clients extricate
themselves earlier.
Bernadine Fox
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