Counseling Services
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Counseling Services
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Location: Individual Counseling  - Confidentiality

Confidentiality

Your therapy contacts with Counseling Services staff are confidential within the limits of the law. All staff members (professional staff, support staff, trainees, and paraprofessionals) are expected to treat as confidential all of their interactions with students who come to this agency for service. UCSB students employed or in training at Counseling Services have no access to student files. Neither your name nor the nature of your contact with psychological services are to be disclosed without your specific written consent.

Exceptions to this are noted below.
Exceptions to confidentiality may be required by law. These exceptions include

  1. where there is reasonable suspicion of abuse of children or elderly persons;
  2. where the person presents a serious danger of violence to another;
  3. where the person is likely to harm himself or herself unless protective measures are taken; and
  4. where release of records is court mandated

All psychologists must adhere to state laws and professional behaviors. The California Board of Psychology protects consumers by ensuring high standards for the practice of psychology.

To find out information on your rights as a client, what types of behaviors psychologists are not supposed to engage in, and information on how to file a complaint, see the Board of Psychology web site.

We credit the University of Chicago Counseling Service for the following statement, which applies to our agency.

E-mail: Think Before You Send

With respect to e-mail communication with psychologists, students are cautioned against this form of communication because e-mail is NOT a confidential means of communication. Therefore, counseling staff at Counseling Services will not respond to any e-mail communications from students with whom they work in a counseling capacity. E-mail is not the appropriate medium to communicate urgent or emergency information.

The risks of e-mail are that it could fail to be received and that confidentiality could be breached. An e-mail could fail to be received if it is sent to the wrong e-mail address or if it just is not noticed by the recipient. Confidentiality could be breached in transit by hackers or Internet service providers and at either end by others who had access to the account or the computer.

The alternatives to e-mail are, of course, writing a letter or a note, making a phone call, and meeting in person.