This question pertains to Domain II: Professional Role Competencies, which focuses on maintaining professional ethics and boundaries, particularly in managing dual relationships. The CPRP Exam Blueprint and PRA Code of Ethics define a dual relationship as “a situation where a practitioner has a pre-existing personal or professional relationship with a client outside the therapeutic context, such as knowing them from a community setting like church.” The scenario involves a consumer-provider (a peer provider) knowing a referral from church, creating a dual relationship if services are provided.
Option D: Providing services to someone known from church constitutes a dual relationship, as the consumer-provider has both a professional (service provider) and personal (church acquaintance) relationship with the individual. This situation requires careful ethical management to avoid boundary violations, per PRA guidelines.
Option A: Transference involves unconscious feelings projected onto the provider, not a pre-existing relationship, making it irrelevant here.
Option B: A conflict of interest involves competing interests (e.g., financial gain), not a personal acquaintance from a community setting.
Option C: A boundary issue may arise from a dual relationship but is a consequence, not the definition of the situation itself.
Extract from CPRP Exam Blueprint (Domain II: Professional Role Competencies):
“Tasks include: 1. Identifying and managing dual relationships to maintain professional boundaries and ethical practice.”
[:, Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association (PRA). (2014). CPRP Exam Blueprint. Retrieved from PRA Certification Handbook., PRA. (2024). CPRP Exam Preparation & Primer Online 2024 Course: Module 3 – Professional Role Competencies., PRA Code of Ethics (2019). Defines dual relationships and ethical management., , ]
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