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Telehealth Professional Boundaries for Substance Abuse Counselors

Professional Boundaries for Virtual Substance Abuse Services

Substance abuse counselors are in a unique position to offer their services in both in-person and digital settings. The rise of virtual visits as a standard of care and service within the mental health field brings exponential benefits and new challenges. Today’s blog post will discuss professional boundaries in telehealth and cover how to ensure you maintain professional boundaries in the digital landscape.

What Are Professional Boundaries?

Professional boundaries are the ethical guidelines and expectations that substance abuse professionals use to guide their everyday interactions with the clients and families that they serve and their colleagues. Boundaries are essential. They support creating and maintaining professional relationships that keep everyone safe.

Substance abuse counselors face daily scenarios where boundaries influence how they interact with clients. For example, it’s not uncommon for a counselor to work with a grateful client who wants to give gifts as a show of appreciation or for a client to flirt with their counselor. Professional boundaries help counselors navigate situations like these in a balanced way that keeps interactions clean and professional.

Your ability to uphold professional and ethical boundaries will determine your competency as a substance abuse counselor.

Navigating Professional Boundaries in Telehealth

The digital landscape can be tricky to navigate. Identifying when a professional boundary is potentially at risk can look and feel different. Let’s consider a multi-faceted scenario and discuss how to handle it ethically.

Scenario: The Emergency Session

Telehealth offers flexibility. Many counselors have direct messaging for their clients, allowing them to reach out anytime. Consider the following scenario that may arise from this virtual feature:

Could Kya have avoided this situation? How could she have handled it better? Let’s discuss some telehealth tips that apply to this scenario.

Prepare For Virtual Client Encounters

Before meeting with a client online, educate them. Here are some suggestions on how to achieve this:

  1. Create a “Client Rights and Responsibilities” document. It should lay out the rights and responsibilities of the client. This can include expectations of conduct, clear dos and don’ts during sessions, and how all virtual services will be used (and not used). Make common violations clear and cover how they will be addressed.

  2. Ask for a Virtual Visit Consent Form. When a client signs this form, it will indicate that they have read, understand, and agree to the Client Rights and Responsibilities.

  3. Promote trust and safety. Make it clear that the client or counselor can terminate a virtual interaction at any time if they feel safety, ethics, or professionalism are at risk. Ensure there is a clear policy regarding how sudden termination will be handled.

Maintain a Structured Schedule

The flexibility of telehealth services can destabilize the work-life balance. You can regain balance as a counselor by creating and maintaining a structured schedule. This looks like:

Stage Professionally and Ethically

Think about the space you will be using for virtual visits. Pay attention to what is in the camera frame, and avoid allowing the space to be overly personal.

In Kya’s situation, she could have staged better by ensuring her space didn’t show personal photographs. Remember, what you show on camera gives your client a glimpse into your world—ensure it’s your professional world they see, not your personal world.

Openly Address Inappropriate Behavior

When a client behaves inappropriately, it becomes the counselor’s responsibility to address the behavior. This is where education becomes crucial. It lays the groundwork for potentially challenging conversations.

If Kya had laid the groundwork for expectations with the abovementioned tools, addressing her client’s unwanted advances could have been easier.

When a professional boundary is crossed, it’s critical to address it openly. For example, she could have initiated a professional conversation instead of ignoring her client’s flirtation behaviors. If addressing her client’s behavior became too uncomfortable or challenging, she could contact her colleagues for supervision and support.

Resources For Professional Boundaries

Virtual visits can make honoring professional boundaries a challenge. Remember, as a substance abuse counselor, you have access to many supportive resources.

You aren’t a solo professional; you’re part of a team.


As you navigate the virtual world of substance abuse counseling, keep these resources handy:

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