Mental Health Professionals in Children's Advocacy Centers: Is There Role Conflict?
Abstract
Two recent chapters in professional books have criticized children's advocacy centers for creating role conflict for mental health professionals because of their work with criminal justice and child protection professionals in children's advocacy centers as part of a coordinated response to child abuse. This article argues that these critiques misunderstand children's advocacy center practice and overestimate the risk of role conflict. Children's advocacy center standards set a boundary between forensic interviewing and therapy, which in most children's advocacy centers are done by separate professionals and never by the same professional for a given child. Many mental health professionals serve children's advocacy centers as consultants with no treatment role. Children's advocacy center therapists are rarely involved in investigation, and their participation in multidisciplinary teams focuses on children's interests and well-being.
Department
Sociology
Publication Date
2012
Journal Title
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1080/10538712.2012.642466
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Cross, Theodore P.; Fine, Janet E.; Walsh, Wendy A.; and Jones, Lisa M., "Mental Health Professionals in Children's Advocacy Centers: Is There Role Conflict?" (2012). Journal of Child Sexual Abuse. 91.
https://scholars.unh.edu/soc_facpub/91