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  1. Feb 15, 2013 · Findings about therapist self-disclosure and about restricting the content of therapy and adopting a directive style, do not receive support from the wider literature and appear to be based on therapists' views in relation to small numbers of Muslim patients rather than service user views.

    • Sarah Catherine Walpole, Dean McMillan, Allan House, David Cottrell, Ghazala Mir
    • 2013
  2. Several themes emerged relating to therapist awareness on culturally derived behaviours, beliefs and attitudes that can influence client response and participation in therapy. The current paper aims to explore one of these themes in greater detail, i.e. client-initiated therapist self-disclosure (TSD).

    • Peter Phiri, Shanaya Rathod, Mary Gobbi, Hannah Carr, David Kingdon
    • 2019
  3. Oct 1, 2015 · An ethical practitioner must also deal with gender-preference, different worldview from the patient, self-disclosure about sensitive issues, expressing negative thoughts or emotions towards one's family, the agreement on protection of information from the family, and inappropriate therapy or psychotherapeutic practices not congruent with ...

    • G. Hussein Rassool
    • 2015
  4. Faith and self-disclosure While it is important for counselors to feel comfortable with their own faith and belief systems, the counselors interviewed for this article agree that it is not necessary for clinicians to share this part of their lives with clients.

  5. May 3, 2018 · Using critical theories of language and discourse, this article analyzes two case examples from recorded therapy sessions between White therapists and clients of color to illustrate how therapists disclose their personal, professional, or cultural self in assessing clients’ presenting issues and selecting interventions.

    • Eunjung Lee
    • 2014
  6. Apr 11, 2012 · While most therapists report that they do disclose some information about themselves to their clients, therapist self-disclosure continues to be both controversial and nebulous in clinical theory, research, and practice.

  7. Dec 12, 2021 · Self-disclosure typically refers to “utterances that reveal personal information about the therapist” (Hill & Knox, 2002, p. 1) to their client; it excludes details related to the treatment, the therapist’s credentials, office policies, and emergency contact details (Barnett, 2011).

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