| Literature DB >> 30506230 |
Zheng Xiao1, Marcus A Rodriguez2, Caitlin M Fang2, Jun Gao3, Clive Robins4, M Zachary Rosenthal2,4.
Abstract
The primary aim of the present study is to explore whether brief education can change Chinese adolescents' and parents' beliefs about when counselors would breach confidentiality. The two secondary aims are to examine whether the brief education (1) increases adolescents' willingness to share private information with their counselor and (2) decreases parents' expectations of the amount of information their child's counselor would divulge to them. Results showed that adolescents and parents who read a brief passage about the limitations of confidentiality were significantly less likely to believe counselors would breach confidentiality in situations where counselors reported they would not likely breach confidentiality. Regarding our secondary research aims, results indicate that education increases adolescents' willingness to share more sensitive information, such as about suicidality and drug use, but it does not change parents' expectations to have most of the information divulged to them by their child's counselor.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30506230 DOI: 10.1007/s11414-018-9639-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Behav Health Serv Res ISSN: 1094-3412 Impact factor: 1.505