TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
Titles of Regulations: 18VAC115-20. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Professional Counseling (amending 18VAC115-20-10, 18VAC115-20-130).
18VAC115-30. Regulations Governing the Certification of
Substance Abuse Counselors and Substance Abuse Counseling Assistants (amending 18VAC115-30-10, 18VAC115-30-140).
18VAC115-50. Regulations Governing the Practice of Marriage
and Family Therapy (amending 18VAC115-50-10, 18VAC115-50-110).
18VAC115-60. Regulations Governing the Practice of Licensed
Substance Abuse Treatment Practitioners (amending 18VAC115-60-10, 18VAC115-60-130).
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of
Virginia.
Public Hearing Information:
October 9, 2020 - 9:45 a.m. - WebEx meeting - A link and
instructions to access the electronic meeting will be posted at https://townhall.virginia.gov/L/ViewMeeting.
cfm?MeetingID=31193 on the Virginia Regulatory Town Hall.
Public Comment Deadline: October 30, 2020.
Agency Contact: Jaime Hoyle, Executive Director, Board
of Counseling, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4406, FAX (804) 527-4435, or email jaime.hoyle@dhp.virginia.gov.
Basis: Regulations are promulgated under the general
authority of § 54.1-2400 of the Code of Virginia, which provides the Board
of Counseling the authority to promulgate regulations to administer the
regulatory system and states that such regulation "shall not conflict with
the purposes and intent of ... Chapter 1 (§ 54.1-100 et seq.)" of the Code
of Virginia. Section 54.1-100 of the Code of Virginia specifies that a
regulation shall not be imposed except for the purpose of protection of the
health, safety, and welfare of the public, which is the intent of this action.
Purpose: The purpose of this regulatory action is to
specify in regulations the interpretation of the board that conversion therapy
has the potential for significant harm if practiced with persons younger than
18 years of age. The regulations define the term consistent with accepted usage
within the profession and consistent with policy statements by state and
national professional organizations.
Substance: For the purposes of the regulatory action,
"conversion therapy" or "sexual orientation change efforts"
is defined as any practice or treatment that seeks to change an individual's
sexual orientation or gender identity, including efforts to change behaviors or
gender expressions or to eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or
feelings toward individuals of any gender. "Conversion therapy" does
not include counseling that provides assistance to a person undergoing gender
transition or counseling that provides acceptance, support, and understanding
of a person or facilitates a person's coping, social support, and identity
exploration and development, including sexual-orientation-neutral interventions
to prevent or address unlawful conduct or unsafe sexual practices, as long as
such counseling does not seek to change an individual's sexual orientation or
gender identity in any direction.
Issues: The primary advantage to the public is
protection for children who might otherwise be subjected to reparative or
conversion therapy. The board does not believe there are disadvantages because
practitioners can provide assistance to a person undergoing gender transition
or counseling that offers acceptance, support, and understanding of a person or
facilitates a person's coping, social support, and identity exploration and
development.
There are no advantages or disadvantages to the agency or the
Commonwealth.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. The Board of
Counseling (Board) proposes to amend 18VAC115-20 Regulations Governing
the Practice of Professional Counseling, 18VAC115-30 Regulations
Governing the Certification of Substance Abuse Counselors, 18VAC115-50
Regulations Governing the Practice of Marriage and Family Therapy, and 18VAC115-60
Regulations Governing the Licensure of Substance Abuse Professionals
(regulations) in order to add a definition of "conversion therapy"
and a stipulation that licensees shall not engage in conversion therapy with
individuals under 18 years of age.
Background. During the 2018 General Assembly Session, Delegates
Patrick A. Hope and Betsy B. Carr introduced a bill (HB 363) that provided a
definition of "sexual orientation change efforts" (SOCE) and would
"prohibit any health care provider or person who performs counseling as
part of his training for any profession licensed by a regulatory board of the
Department of Health Professions (DHP) from engaging in sexual orientation
change efforts with a person under 18 years of age."1 The bill
was referred to the Committee on Health, Welfare and Institutions and assigned
to a subcommittee where, in the course of their deliberations, the question was
raised as to why the issue had not already been addressed by licensing boards.
The bill was passed by indefinitely and left in subcommittee.
Subsequently, the President of the Board of Psychology
recommended that the Director of DHP convene a workgroup to discuss the issue.
The workgroup met on October 5, 2018 and included representatives from the
Boards of Counseling, Medicine, Psychology and Social Work. After substantial
debate, most members concurred that there was a need for more protection of
children. It was agreed that each board would have to make the decision whether
to promulgate regulation.
The proposed amendments mirror the language of HB 363, and
define conversion therapy in some detail:
"Conversion therapy" means any practice or treatment
that seeks to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender identity,
including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to eliminate or
reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward individuals of the
same gender. Conversion therapy does not include:
1. Counseling that provides assistance to a person undergoing
gender transition; or
2. Counseling that provides acceptance, support, and
understanding of a person or facilitates a person's coping, social support, and
identity exploration and development, including sexual-orientation-neutral interventions
to prevent or address unlawful conduct or unsafe sexual practices, as long as
such counseling does not seek to change an individual's sexual orientation or
gender identity in any direction.
This definition appears to be consistent with those adopted by
the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association,
and other professional associations.2
In general, DHP reports that licensed providers are not taught
conversion therapy as part of their professional training, and that the agency
has not received any complaints or reports of licensees practicing conversion
therapy. However, the counseling, social work, and medical professional
communities have adopted resolutions and position statements based on research
conducted over the past two decades regarding the effects of conversion
therapy, particularly on minors.3,4,5 The Virginia Counselors
Association specifically posted a comment at the NOIRA stage saying, "it
is our position that it is unprofessional and dangerous conduct for a counselor
to engage in sexual orientation change efforts, known as "conversion
therapy," especially in persons under age 18."6 Hence, the
Board is proposing these amendments based on its authority to impose
regulations for the protection of the health, safety, and welfare of the
public. The Boards of Social Work, Psychology, Medicine, and Nursing have also
initiated regulatory actions with nearly identical proposed changes.7
In contrast, some religious organizations continue to offer
conversion therapy. The organizations, including programs aimed at teenagers
and young adults, may use different terminologies such as 'ex-gay ministry',
'reparative therapy', or 'promoting healthy sexuality' but the programs seek to
change the individual's sexual orientation or gender identity, thus appearing
to meet the Board's definition of conversion therapy. However, religious
counselors (rabbis, priests, ministers, or clergymen) are exempt from the
requirement for licensure.8 As a result, the content of this regulation
would not apply to them. Accordingly, the Board has no authority to take
disciplinary action against religious organizations and affiliated counselors
who continue to provide conversion therapy, unless they are also licensed by
the Board.
Estimated Benefits and Costs. For the reasons described above,
it is unlikely that counselors licensed by the Board presently provide
conversion therapy. Moreover, programs that are conducted in a religious
setting by rabbis, priests, ministers or clergymen are exempt from licensure.
Hence, although the proposed regulation has received 692 public comments and
appears to have been controversial, it is unlikely to have substantive economic
impact.
To the extent that the Board's licensees are currently engaging
in conversion therapy with individuals under 18 years of age, they may now have
to change their practice, lose clients, or face disciplinary action if they
fail to comply with the regulation. However, as mentioned previously,
conversion therapy is not an evidence-based practice and is hence not included
in the curriculum at accredited counseling programs and not practiced by the
vast majority of licensed professionals. Any current license-holders choosing
to forfeit their licensure in favor of continuing to practice conversion
therapy may continue to do so if employed as a rabbi, priest, minister or
clergyman, as long as they belong to "an established and legally
cognizable church, denomination or sect" and remain "accountable to
its established authority."9
Clients under age 18, who seek to receive, or continue
receiving, conversion therapy from licensed providers, and their parents, may
now face certain indirect costs if they choose to find other providers. The
amount of the cost would depend upon the availability of providers, including
religious counselors. Conversely, children and their parents may be benefited
to the degree the board's action limits the availability of conversion therapy.
The degree of this benefit would depend upon the extent to which the harms
cited by the professional organizations noted above would have occurred but for
this regulatory action.
Businesses and Other Entities Affected. As mentioned above,
some licensed practitioners who may also have been working in a religious
setting may have to alter their practice or face disciplinary action, but DHP
estimates that these are most likely a very small fraction of the overall
number of license-holders.10 Although DHP does not have an estimate
of the number of affected providers, the agency reports that the vast majority
of current license-holders likely do not engage in conversion therapy at all
(in either religious or secular settings) since it is not taught by any
accredited program and has been considered contrary to the "professional code
of ethics" in an informal capacity for more than a decade.
Small Businesses11 Affected. Although many licensed
practitioners may be employed in a small business setting, DHP estimates that
only a very small fraction of the overall number of license-holders would be
affected by the regulation at all, and there is no reason to suggest that those
affected are more likely to be working in a small business. Even so, the cost
of complying with the regulation is unlikely to be significant, and there are
no alternatives to the regulation that would provide greater flexibility while
also meeting its policy objectives.
Localities12 Affected.13 The proposed
amendments do not introduce new costs for local governments and are unlikely to
affect any locality in particular.
Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendments are
unlikely to affect the overall number of employed Licensed Professional
Counselors, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists, Licensed Substance Abuse
Treatment Providers, and Certified Substance Abuse Counselors.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
amendments are unlikely to affect the use and value of private property. Real
estate development costs are not affected.
__________________________________
1See http://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/legp604.exe?ses=181&typ=bil&
val=hb363
2See https://williamsinstitute.law.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/Conversion-Therapy-LGBT-Youth-Jan-2018.pdf?response_type=embed and citations therein.
3See https://www.apa.org/about/policy/sexual-orientation For instance, the American Psychological Association
convened a task force whose 2009 report Appropriate Therapeutic Responses to
Sexual Orientation states "…Thus, the results of scientifically valid
research indicate that it is unlikely that individuals will be able to reduce
same-sex attractions or increase other-sex sexual attractions through SOCE. We found
that there was some evidence to indicate that individuals experienced harm from
SOCE." See https://www.apa.org/pi/lgbt/resources/therapeutic-response.pdf (Executive Summary)
4See https://www.psychiatry.org/newsroom/news-releases/apa-reiterates-strong-opposition-to-conversion-therapy. In a 2013 Position Statement, the American
Psychiatric Association stated that it "does not believe that same-sex
orientation should or needs to be changed, and efforts to do so represent a
significant risk of harm by subjecting individuals to forms of treatment which
have not been scientifically validated and by undermining self-esteem when
sexual orientation fails to change. No credible evidence exists that any mental
health intervention can reliably and safely change sexual orientation; nor,
from a mental health perspective does sexual orientation need to be
changed." Downloaded from https://www.psychiatry.org/home/policy-finder
5See https://www.ama-assn.org/press-center/press-releases/ama-adopts-new-policies-during-first-day-voting-interim-meeting
6See https://townhall.virginia.gov/L/viewcomments.cfm?commentid=75098.
7See Board of Social Work Action 5241 (https://townhall.virginia.gov/l/ViewAction.cfm?actionid=5241), Board of Psychology Action 5218 (https://townhall.virginia.gov/l/ViewAction.cfm?actionid=5218) and Board of Medicine Action 5412 (https://townhall.virginia.gov/L/viewaction.cfm?actionid=5412) and Board of Nursing Action 5430 (https://townhall.virginia.gov/l/ViewAction.cfm?actionid=5430).
8As per COV § 54.1-3501 Exemption from requirements
of licensure: The activities, including marriage and family therapy,
counseling, or substance abuse treatment, of rabbis, priests, ministers or
clergymen of any religious denomination or sect when such activities are within
the scope of the performance of their regular or specialized ministerial
duties, and no separate charge is made or when such activities are performed,
whether with or without charge, for or under auspices or sponsorship,
individually or in conjunction with others, of an established and legally
cognizable church, denomination or sect, and the person rendering service
remains accountable to its established authority.
10According to the ABD, the overall numbers of licensees
are as follows: 5,784 Licensed Professional Counselors, 840 Marriage and Family
Therapists, 260 Licensed Substance Abuse Treatment Providers, and 1,876
Certified Substance Abuse Counselors.
11Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
12"Locality" can refer to either local
governments or the locations in the Commonwealth where the activities relevant
to the regulatory change are most likely to occur.
13§ 2.2-4007.04 defines "particularly affected"
as bearing disproportionate material impact.
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The Board
of Counseling concurs with the analysis of the Department of Planning and
Budget.
Summary:
The amendments define conversion therapy and establish that
the standard of practice for persons licensed, certified, or registered by the
board preclude the provision of conversion therapy to persons younger than 18
years of age.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-20-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia:
"Board"
"Counseling"
"Professional counselor"
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Ancillary counseling services" means activities
such as case management, recordkeeping, referral, and coordination of services.
"Applicant" means any individual who has submitted
an official application and paid the application fee for licensure as a
professional counselor.
"CACREP" means the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Educational Programs.
"Candidate for licensure" means a person who has
satisfactorily completed all educational and experience requirements for
licensure and has been deemed eligible by the board to sit for its
examinations.
"Clinical counseling services" means activities
such as assessment, diagnosis, treatment planning, and treatment
implementation.
"Competency area" means an area in which a person
possesses knowledge and skill and the ability to apply them in the clinical
setting.
"Conversion therapy" means any practice or
treatment that seeks to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender
identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to
eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward
individuals of the same gender. Conversion therapy does not include:
1. Counseling that provides assistance to a person
undergoing gender transition; or
2. Counseling that provides acceptance, support, and
understanding of a person or facilitates a person's coping, social support, and
identity exploration and development, including sexual-orientation-neutral
interventions to prevent or address unlawful conduct or unsafe sexual
practices, as long as such counseling does not seek to change an individual's
sexual orientation or gender identity in any direction.
"CORE" means Council on Rehabilitation Education.
"Exempt setting" means an agency or institution in
which licensure is not required to engage in the practice of counseling
according to the conditions set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the Code of
Virginia.
"Face-to-face" means the in-person delivery of
clinical counseling services for a client.
"Group supervision" means the process of clinical
supervision of no more than six persons in a group setting provided by a
qualified supervisor.
"Internship" means a formal academic course from a
regionally accredited college or university in which supervised, practical
experience is obtained in a clinical setting in the application of counseling
principles, methods, and techniques.
"Jurisdiction" means a state, territory, district,
province, or country that has granted a professional certificate or license to
practice a profession, use a professional title, or hold oneself out as a practitioner
of that profession.
"Nonexempt setting" means a setting that does not
meet the conditions of exemption from the requirements of licensure to engage
in the practice of counseling as set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the Code of
Virginia.
"Regional accrediting agency" means one of the
regional accreditation agencies recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education
responsible for accrediting senior postsecondary institutions.
"Residency" means a postgraduate, supervised,
clinical experience registered with the board.
"Resident" means an individual who has submitted a
supervisory contract and has received board approval to provide clinical
services in professional counseling under supervision.
"Supervision" means the ongoing process performed
by a supervisor who monitors the performance of the person supervised and
provides regular, documented individual or group consultation, guidance, and
instruction that is specific to the clinical counseling services being
performed with respect to the clinical skills and competencies of the person
supervised.
Part V
Standards of Practice; Unprofessional Conduct; Disciplinary Actions;
Reinstatement
18VAC115-20-130. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and welfare
and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in determining
the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose activities are
regulated by the board. Regardless of the delivery method, whether in person,
by phone, or electronically, these standards shall apply to the practice of
counseling.
B. Persons licensed or registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of their competence,
based on their education, training, supervised experience, and appropriate
professional experience and represent their education, training, and experience
accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new counseling information, concepts,
applications, and practices that are necessary to providing appropriate,
effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as
necessary and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes;
5. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making appropriate
arrangements for the continuation of treatment for clients, when necessary,
following termination of a counseling relationship;
6. Make appropriate arrangements for continuation of services,
when necessary, during interruptions such as vacations, unavailability,
relocation, illness, and disability;
7. Disclose to clients all experimental methods of treatment
and inform clients of the risks and benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that
the welfare of the clients is in no way compromised in any experimentation or
research involving those clients;
8. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services;
9. Inform clients of the purposes, goals, techniques,
procedures, limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services to be
performed; the limitations of confidentiality; and other pertinent information
when counseling is initiated and throughout the counseling process as
necessary. Provide clients with accurate information regarding the implications
of diagnosis, the intended use of tests and reports, fees, and billing
arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that are valid,
reliable, and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of
individuals not represented in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving services from
another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from providing
services to the client without having an informed consent discussion with the
client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in connection with one's practice as a mental
health professional those educational and professional degrees or titles that
have been earned at a college or university accredited by an accrediting agency
recognized by the U.S. Department of Education, or credentials granted by a
national certifying agency, and that are counseling in nature; and
13. Advertise professional services fairly and accurately in a
manner that is not false, misleading, or deceptive; and
14. Not engage in conversion therapy with any person
younger than 18 years of age.
C. In regard to patient records, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Maintain written or electronic clinical records for each client
to include treatment dates and identifying information to substantiate
diagnosis and treatment plan, client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality, and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality;
3. Disclose or release records to others only with the
client's expressed written consent or that of the client's legally authorized
representative in accordance with § 32.1-127.1:03 of the Code of Virginia;
4. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from the client or the
client's legally authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio
recording, (iii) permitting third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable
client records and clinical materials in teaching, writing, or public
presentations; and
5. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the counseling
relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or 10 years
following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or
federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have been transferred to another mental health
service provider or given to the client or his legally authorized
representative.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Avoid dual relationships with clients that could impair
professional judgment or increase the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such
relationships include, but are not limited to, familial, social,
financial, business, bartering, or close personal relationships with clients.
Counselors shall take appropriate professional precautions when a dual
relationship cannot be avoided, such as informed consent, consultation,
supervision, and documentation to ensure that judgment is not impaired and no
exploitation occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic relationships or sexual
intimacies with clients or those included in a collateral relationship with the
client and not counsel persons with whom they have had a romantic relationship
or sexual intimacy. Counselors shall not engage in romantic relationships or
sexual intimacies with former clients within a minimum of five years after
terminating the counseling relationship. Counselors who engage in such
relationship or intimacy after five years following termination shall have the
responsibility to examine and document thoroughly that such relations do not
have an exploitive nature, based on factors such as duration of counseling,
amount of time since counseling, termination circumstances, client's personal
history and mental status, or adverse impact on the client. A client's consent
to, initiation of, or participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a
counselor does not change the nature of the conduct nor lift the regulatory
prohibition;
3. Not engage in any romantic relationship or sexual intimacy
or establish a counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a supervisee
or student. Counselors shall avoid any nonsexual dual relationship with a
supervisee or student in which there is a risk of exploitation or potential
harm to the supervisee or student or the potential for interference with the
supervisor's professional judgment; and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities involved.
E. Persons licensed by this board shall report to the board
known or suspected violations of the laws and regulations governing the practice
of professional counseling.
F. Persons licensed by the board shall advise their clients
of their right to report to the Department of Health Professions any
information of which the licensee may become aware in his professional capacity
indicating that there is a reasonable probability that a person licensed or
certified as a mental health service provider, as defined in § 54.1-2400.1
of the Code of Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent, or
unprofessional conduct as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and
regulations.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-30-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia:
"Board"
"Certified substance abuse counselor"
"Certified substance abuse counseling assistant"
"Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioner"
"Practice of substance abuse treatment"
"Substance abuse" and "substance
dependence"
"Substance abuse treatment"
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Applicant" means an individual who has submitted a
completed application with documentation and the appropriate fees to be examined
for certification as a substance abuse counselor or substance abuse counseling
assistant.
"Candidate" means a person who has been approved to
take the examinations for certification as a substance abuse counselor or
substance abuse counseling assistant.
"Clinical supervision" means the ongoing process
performed by a clinical supervisor who monitors the performance of the person
supervised and provides regular, documented face-to-face consultation, guidance
and education with respect to the clinical skills and competencies of the
person supervised.
"Clinical supervisor" means one who provides
case-related supervision, consultation, education and guidance for the
applicant. The supervisor must be credentialed as defined in 18VAC115-30-60 C.
"Competency area" means an area in which a person
possesses knowledge and skill and the ability to apply them in the clinical
setting.
"Contact hour" means the amount of credit awarded
for 60 minutes of participation in and successful completion of a continuing education
program.
"Conversion therapy" means any practice or
treatment that seeks to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender
identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to
eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward
individuals of the same gender. Conversion therapy does not include:
1. Counseling that provides assistance to a person
undergoing gender transition; or
2. Counseling that provides acceptance, support, and
understanding of a person or facilitates a person's coping, social support, and
identity exploration and development, including sexual-orientation-neutral
interventions to prevent or address unlawful conduct or unsafe sexual
practices, as long as such counseling does not seek to change an individual's
sexual orientation or gender identity in any direction.
"Didactic" means teaching-learning methods that
impart facts and information, usually in the form of one-way communication
(includes directed readings and lectures).
"Group supervision" means the process of clinical
supervision of no less than two nor more than six persons in a group setting
provided by a clinical supervisor.
"NAADAC" means the Association of Addiction
Professionals.
"NCC AP" means the National Certification
Commission for Addiction Professionals, an affiliate of NAADAC.
"Regionally accredited" means accredited by one of
the regional accreditation agencies recognized by the U.S. Department of
Education as responsible for accrediting senior postsecondary institutions.
"Substance abuse counseling" means applying a
counseling process, treatment strategies and rehabilitative services to help an
individual to:
1. Understand his substance use, abuse, or dependency;
and
2. Change his drug-taking behavior so that it does not
interfere with effective physical, psychological, social, or vocational
functioning.
Part V
Standards of Practice; Disciplinary Actions; Reinstatement
18VAC115-30-140. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and welfare
and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in determining
the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose activities are
regulated by the board.
B. Persons certified by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare.
2. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as
necessary for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes.
3. Practice only within the competency area for which they are
qualified by training or experience.
4. Report to the board known or suspected violations of the
laws and regulations governing the practice of certified substance abuse
counselors or certified substance abuse counseling assistants.
5. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services. Make
appropriate consultations and referrals based on the best interest of clients.
6. Stay abreast of new developments, concepts, and practices
that are necessary to providing appropriate services.
7. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making arrangements
for the continuation of treatment for clients when necessary, following
termination of a counseling relationship.
8. Not willfully or negligently breach the confidentiality
between a practitioner and a client. A breach of confidentiality that is
required or permitted by applicable law or beyond the control of the
practitioner shall not be considered negligent or willful.
9. Not engage in conversion therapy with any person younger
than 18 years of age.
C. In regard to client records, persons certified by the
board shall:
1. Disclose counseling records to others only in accordance
with applicable law.
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality, and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality.
3. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from the client or the
client's legally authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio
recording, (iii) permitting third-party observation, or (iv) using identifiable
client records and clinical materials in teaching, writing, or public
presentations.
4. Maintain timely, accurate, legible, and complete written or
electronic records for each client, to include counseling dates and identifying
information to substantiate the substance abuse counseling plan, client
progress, and termination.
5. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the counseling
relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years);
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or
federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have been transferred to another mental health
service provider or given to the client or the client's legally authorized
representative.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons certified by the
board shall:
1. Not engage in dual relationships with clients, former
clients, supervisees, and supervisors that are harmful to the client's or
supervisee's well-being or that would impair the substance abuse counselor's,
substance abuse counseling assistant's, or supervisor's objectivity and
professional judgment or increase the risk of client or supervisee
exploitation. This prohibition includes such activities as counseling close
friends, former sexual partners, employees, or relatives or engaging in
business relationships with clients.
2. Not engage in sexual intimacies or romantic relationships
with current clients or supervisees. For at least five years after cessation or
termination of professional services, certified substance abuse counselors and
certified substance abuse counseling assistants shall not engage in sexual
intimacies or romantic relationships with a client or those included in
collateral therapeutic services. Because sexual or romantic relationships are
potentially exploitative, certified substance abuse counselors and certified
substance abuse counseling assistants shall bear the burden of demonstrating
that there has been no exploitation. A client's consent to, initiation of, or
participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a certified substance
abuse counselor or certified substance abuse counseling assistants does not
change the nature of the conduct nor lift the regulatory prohibition.
3. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
obligations, responsibilities, and loyalties to third parties.
E. Upon learning of evidence that indicates a reasonable
probability that another mental health provider is or may be guilty of a
violation of standards of conduct as defined in statute or regulation, persons
certified by the board shall advise their clients of their right to report such
misconduct to the Department of Health Professions in accordance with § 54.1-2400.4
of the Code of Virginia.
18VAC115-50-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia: (i) "board," (ii) "marriage and family therapy,"
(iii) "marriage and family therapist," and (iv) "practice of
marriage and family therapy."
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Ancillary counseling services" means activities
such as case management, recordkeeping, referral, and coordination of services.
"CACREP" means the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Educational Programs.
"COAMFTE" means the Commission on Accreditation for
Marriage and Family Therapy Education.
"Clinical marriage and family services" means
activities such as assessment, diagnosis, and treatment planning and treatment
implementation for couples and families.
"Conversion therapy" means any practice or
treatment that seeks to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender
identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to
eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward
individuals of the same gender. Conversion therapy does not include:
1. Counseling that provides assistance to a person
undergoing gender transition; or
2. Counseling that provides acceptance, support, and
understanding of a person or facilitates a person's coping, social support, and
identity exploration and development, including sexual-orientation-neutral
interventions to prevent or address unlawful conduct or unsafe sexual
practices, as long as such counseling does not seek to change an individual's
sexual orientation or gender identity in any direction.
"Face-to-face" means the in-person delivery of clinical
marriage and family services for a client.
"Internship" means a formal academic course from a
regionally accredited university in which supervised practical experience is
obtained in a clinical setting in the application of counseling principles, methods,
and techniques.
"Regional accrediting agency" means one of the
regional accreditation agencies recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education
as responsible for accrediting senior post-secondary institutions and training
programs.
"Residency" means a postgraduate, supervised
clinical experience registered with the board.
"Resident" means an individual who has submitted a
supervisory contract to the board and has received board approval to provide
clinical services in marriage and family therapy under supervision.
"Supervision" means an ongoing process performed by
a supervisor who monitors the performance of the person supervised and provides
regular, documented, individual or group consultation, guidance, and
instruction with respect to the clinical skills and competencies of the person
or persons being supervised.
18VAC115-50-110. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public's health, safety, and
welfare and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in
determining the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose
activities are regulated by the board. Regardless of the delivery method,
whether in person, by phone or electronically, these standards shall apply to
the practice of marriage and family therapy.
B. Persons licensed or
registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of their competence,
based on their education, training, supervised experience, and
appropriate professional experience and represent their education, training,
and experience accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new marriage and family therapy information,
concepts, applications, and practices that are necessary to providing
appropriate, effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as
necessary and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes;
5. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making appropriate
arrangements for the continuation of treatment for clients, when necessary,
following termination of a counseling relationship;
6. Make appropriate arrangements for continuation of services,
when necessary, during interruptions such as vacations, unavailability,
relocation, illness, and disability;
7. Disclose to clients all experimental methods of treatment
and inform client of the risks and benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that
the welfare of the client is not compromised in any experimentation or research
involving those clients;
8. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates or other forms
of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services;
9. Inform clients of the purposes, goals, techniques,
procedures, limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services to be
performed; the limitations of confidentiality; and other pertinent information
when counseling is initiated and throughout the counseling process as
necessary. Provide clients with accurate information regarding the implications
of diagnosis, the intended use of tests and reports, fees, and billing
arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that are valid, reliable,
and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of individuals not
represented in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving services from
another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from providing
services to the client without having an informed consent discussion with the
client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in connection with one's practice as a mental
health professional those educational and professional degrees or titles that
have been earned at a college or university accredited by an accrediting agency
recognized by the U.S. Department of Education, or credentials granted by a
national certifying agency, and that are counseling in nature; and
13. Advertise professional services fairly and accurately in a
manner that is not false, misleading or deceptive; and
14. Not engage in conversion therapy with any person
younger than 18 years of age.
C. In regard to patient records, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Maintain written or electronic clinical records for each
client to include treatment dates and identifying information to substantiate
diagnosis and treatment plan, client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality;
3. Disclose or release client records to others only with
clients' expressed written consent or that of their legally authorized
representative in accordance with § 32.1-127.1:03 of the Code of Virginia;
4. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from clients or their legally
authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio recording, (iii)
permitting third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable client records
and clinical materials in teaching, writing, or public presentations; and
5. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the counseling
relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or 10 years
following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or
federal law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have transferred to another mental health
service provider or given to the client or his legally authorized
representative.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons licensed by the board
shall:
1. Avoid dual relationships with clients that could impair
professional judgment or increase the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such
relationships include, but are not limited to, familial, social,
financial, business, bartering, or close personal relationships with clients.
Marriage and family therapists shall take appropriate professional precautions
when a dual relationship cannot be avoided, such as informed consent,
consultation, supervision, and documentation to ensure that judgment is not
impaired and no exploitation occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic relationships or sexual
intimacies with clients or those included in a collateral relationship with the
client and also not counsel persons with whom they have had a sexual intimacy
or romantic relationship. Marriage and family therapists shall not engage in
romantic relationships or sexual intimacies with former clients within a
minimum of five years after terminating the counseling relationship. Marriage
and family therapists who engage in such relationship or intimacy after five
years following termination shall have the responsibility to examine and
document thoroughly that such relations do not have an exploitive nature, based
on factors such as duration of counseling, amount of time since counseling,
termination circumstances, client's personal history and mental status, or
adverse impact on the client. A client's consent to, initiation of or
participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a marriage and family therapist
does not change the nature of the conduct nor lift the regulatory prohibition;
3. Not engage in any romantic relationships or sexual
relationship or establish a counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a
supervisee or student. Marriage and family therapists shall avoid any nonsexual
dual relationship with a supervisee or student in which there is a risk of
exploitation or potential harm to the supervisee or student or the potential
for interference with the supervisor's professional judgment; and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities involved.
E. Persons licensed by this board shall report to the board
known or suspected violations of the laws and regulations governing the
practice of marriage and family therapy.
F. Persons licensed by the board shall advise their clients
of their right to report to the Department of Health Professions any
information of which the licensee may become aware in his professional capacity
indicating that there is a reasonable probability that a person licensed or
certified as a mental health service provider, as defined in § 54.1-2400.1
of the Code of Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent or
unprofessional conduct as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and
regulations.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-60-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the meaning ascribed to them in § 54.1-3500 of the Code of
Virginia:
"Board"
"Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioner"
"Substance abuse"
"Substance abuse treatment"
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Ancillary services" means activities such as case
management, recordkeeping, referral, and coordination of services.
"Applicant" means any individual who has submitted
an official application and paid the application fee for licensure as a
substance abuse treatment practitioner.
"CACREP" means the Council for Accreditation of
Counseling and Related Educational Programs.
"Candidate for licensure" means a person who has
satisfactorily completed all educational and experience requirements for
licensure and has been deemed eligible by the board to sit for its
examinations.
"Clinical substance abuse treatment services" means
activities such as assessment, diagnosis, treatment planning, and treatment
implementation.
"COAMFTE" means the Commission on Accreditation for
Marriage and Family Therapy Education.
"Competency area" means an area in which a person
possesses knowledge and skill and the ability to apply them in the clinical
setting.
"Conversion therapy" means any practice or
treatment that seeks to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender
identity, including efforts to change behaviors or gender expressions or to
eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward
individuals of the same gender. Conversion therapy does not include:
1. Counseling that provides assistance to a person
undergoing gender transition; or
2. Counseling that provides acceptance, support, and
understanding of a person or facilitates a person's coping, social support, and
identity exploration and development, including sexual-orientation-neutral
interventions to prevent or address unlawful conduct or unsafe sexual
practices, as long as such counseling does not seek to change an individual's
sexual orientation or gender identity in any direction.
"Exempt setting" means an agency or institution in
which licensure is not required to engage in the practice of substance abuse
treatment according to the conditions set forth in § 54.1-3501 of the Code
of Virginia.
"Face-to-face" means the in-person delivery of clinical
substance abuse treatment services for a client.
"Group supervision" means the process of clinical
supervision of no more than six persons in a group setting provided by a
qualified supervisor.
"Internship" means a formal academic course from a
regionally accredited university in which supervised, practical experience is
obtained in a clinical setting in the application of counseling principles,
methods and techniques.
"Jurisdiction" means a state, territory, district,
province, or country which that has granted a professional
certificate or license to practice a profession, use a professional title, or
hold oneself out as a practitioner of that profession.
"Nonexempt setting" means a setting which that
does not meet the conditions of exemption from the requirements of licensure to
engage in the practice of substance abuse treatment as set forth in § 54.1-3501
of the Code of Virginia.
"Regional accrediting agency" means one of the
regional accreditation agencies recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education
responsible for accrediting senior postsecondary institutions.
"Residency" means a postgraduate, supervised,
clinical experience registered with the board.
"Resident" means an individual who has submitted a
supervisory contract and has received board approval to provide clinical
services in substance abuse treatment under supervision.
"Supervision" means the ongoing process performed
by a supervisor who monitors the performance of the person supervised and
provides regular, documented individual or group consultation, guidance,
and instruction with respect to the clinical skills and competencies of the
person supervised.
Part V
Standards of Practice; Unprofessional Conduct; Disciplinary Actions;
Reinstatement
18VAC115-60-130. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and welfare
and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in determining
the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose activities are
regulated by the board. Regardless of the delivery method, whether in person,
by phone or electronically, these standards shall apply to the practice of
substance abuse treatment.
B. Persons licensed or registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare;
2. Practice only within the boundaries of their competence,
based on their education, training, supervised experience and appropriate
professional experience and represent their education, training and experience
accurately to clients;
3. Stay abreast of new substance abuse treatment information,
concepts, application, and practices that are necessary to providing
appropriate, effective professional services;
4. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as
necessary and appropriate for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes;
5. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate a
counseling relationship when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting
from the relationship. Document the assistance provided in making appropriate
arrangements for the continuation of treatment for clients, when necessary,
following termination of a counseling relationship;
6. Make appropriate arrangements for continuation of services,
when necessary, during interruptions such as vacations, unavailability,
relocation, illness, and disability;
7. Disclose to clients all experimental methods of treatment
and inform clients of the risks and benefits of any such treatment. Ensure that
the welfare of the clients is in no way compromised in any experimentation or
research involving those clients;
8. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services;
9. Inform clients of the purposes, goals, techniques,
procedures, limitations, potential risks, and benefits of services to be
performed; the limitations of confidentiality; and other pertinent information
when counseling is initiated and throughout the counseling process as necessary.
Provide clients with accurate information regarding the implications of
diagnosis, the intended use of tests and reports, fees, and billing
arrangements;
10. Select tests for use with clients that are valid, reliable,
and appropriate and carefully interpret the performance of individuals not
represented in standardized norms;
11. Determine whether a client is receiving services from
another mental health service provider, and if so, refrain from providing
services to the client without having an informed consent discussion with the
client and having been granted communication privileges with the other
professional;
12. Use only in connection with one's practice as a mental
health professional those educational and professional degrees or titles that
have been earned at a college or university accredited by an accrediting agency
recognized by the U.S. Department of Education, or credentials granted by a
national certifying agency, and that are counseling in nature; and
13. Advertise professional services fairly and accurately in a
manner that is not false, misleading or deceptive; and
14. Not engage in conversion therapy with any person
younger than 18 years of age.
C. In regard to patient records, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Maintain written or electronic clinical records for each
client to include treatment dates and identifying information to substantiate
diagnosis and treatment plan, client progress, and termination;
2. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees of
the requirements of confidentiality and provide for the destruction of records
that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client confidentiality;
3. Disclose or release records to others only with clients'
expressed written consent or that of their legally authorized representative in
accordance with § 32.1-127.1:03 of the Code of Virginia;
4. Maintain client records for a minimum of five years or as
otherwise required by law from the date of termination of the substance abuse
treatment relationship with the following exceptions:
a. At minimum, records of a minor child shall be maintained
for five years after attaining the age of majority (18 years) or 10 years
following termination, whichever comes later;
b. Records that are required by contractual obligation or federal
law to be maintained for a longer period of time; or
c. Records that have been transferred to another mental health
service provider or given to the client; and
5. Ensure confidentiality in the usage of client records and
clinical materials by obtaining informed consent from clients or their legally
authorized representative before (i) videotaping, (ii) audio recording, (iii)
permitting third party observation, or (iv) using identifiable client records
and clinical materials in teaching, writing or public presentations.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons licensed by the
board shall:
1. Avoid dual relationships with clients that could impair
professional judgment or increase the risk of harm to clients. Examples of such
relationships include, but are not limited to, familial, social,
financial, business, bartering, or close personal relationships with clients.
Counselors shall take appropriate professional precautions when a dual
relationship cannot be avoided, such as informed consent, consultation,
supervision, and documentation to ensure that judgment is not impaired and no
exploitation occurs;
2. Not engage in any type of romantic relationships or sexual
intimacies with clients or those included in a collateral relationship with the
client and not counsel persons with whom they have had a romantic relationship
or sexual intimacy. Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioners shall not
engage in romantic relationships or sexual intimacies with former clients
within a minimum of five years after terminating the counseling relationship.
Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioners who engage in such
relationship or intimacy after five years following termination shall have the
responsibility to examine and document thoroughly that such relations do not
have an exploitive nature, based on factors such as duration of counseling,
amount of time since counseling, termination circumstances, client's personal
history and mental status, or adverse impact on the client. A client's consent
to, initiation of or participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a
licensed substance abuse treatment practitioner does not change the nature of
the conduct nor lift the regulatory prohibition;
3. Not engage in any sexual intimacy or romantic relationship
or establish a counseling or psychotherapeutic relationship with a supervisee
or student. Licensed substance abuse treatment practitioners shall avoid any
nonsexual dual relationship with a supervisee or student in which there is a
risk of exploitation or potential harm to the supervisee or the potential for
interference with the supervisor's professional judgment; and
4. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties of
the nature and directions of loyalties and responsibilities involved.
E. Persons licensed by this board shall report to the board
known or suspected violations of the laws and regulations governing the
practice of substance abuse treatment.
F. Persons licensed by the board shall advise their clients
of their right to report to the Department of Health Professions any
information of which the licensee may become aware in his professional capacity
indicating that there is a reasonable probability that a person licensed or
certified as a mental health service provider, as defined in § 54.1-2400.1
of the Code of Virginia, may have engaged in unethical, fraudulent or
unprofessional conduct as defined by the pertinent licensing statutes and
regulations.
VA.R. Doc. No. R19-5842; Filed August 6, 2020, 1:57 p.m.