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Results
#1. A Board Certified Behavior Analyst (BCBA) is at a local coffee shop, waiting in line. They overhear a supervisee loudly discussing a client’s recent challenging behaviors with a colleague. The supervisee mentions specific details about the client’s family, school interventions, and even the unique circumstances of their home environment, making it highly probable for someone familiar with the local school district or community to identify the client. What ethical guideline is being primarily violated, and what should be the BCBA’s immediate concern regarding this situation?
The text explicitly states you should avoid talking about the client in public places at the risk of revealing sensitive information and emphasizes clients rights to dignity and privacy The scenario describes a direct breach of this principle as specific details shared publicly could lead to client identification compromising their confidentiality and dignity While gossiping about stakeholders is also unethical the core issue here is the public disclosure of identifiable client information Informed consent relates to obtaining permission for specific actions which is a prerequisite for sharing but the act of sharing without proper discretion in a public place is the direct violation here Data privacy is a broader concept but the specific ethical concern in this context is the lack of discretion and the potential for identification
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