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Course: Module 9: Applying & Sustaining / Bo...
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Lesson 2: Ethical Risks of Burnout in Therapeutic Practice

Ethical Risks of Burnout in Therapeutic Practice

For psychologists and psychotherapists, burnout is not only a wellbeing concern—it becomes an ethical issue when it impairs clinical functioning, reduces therapeutic effectiveness, and increases the risk of harm to clients.

When Burnout Affects Clinical Functioning

For psychologists and psychotherapists, burnout is associated with psychological and cognitive impairments that directly affect therapeutic functioning. Research shows that burnout can compromise clinical judgment, reduce emotional attunement and empathy, impair attention and information processing, and weaken boundary regulation (Maslach & Leiter, 2016; Delgadillo et al., 2018).

As a result, burnout does not remain internal to the therapist—it alters the therapeutic process itself.

Burnout → Ethical Risk Pathway

For psychologists and psychotherapists, the shift from burnout to ethical risk is often gradual and difficult to recognise in real time. Burnout-related strain can progressively reduce psychological and cognitive capacity, leading to subtle changes in clinical behaviour and an increased likelihood of ethical breaches. Research shows that clinician distress is associated with higher rates of clinical errors, reduced adherence to best practices, and diminished quality of the therapeutic relationship (Simionato et al., 2019).

Ethical Consequences

Burnout reduces the therapist’s ability to:

     Maintain consistent attention

     Process complex emotional material

     Respond flexibly to client needs

Even when sessions continue as scheduled, the quality of engagement may decline significantly.

 

Risk of Harm

Ethical frameworks emphasise that harm is not limited to overt mistakes. It also includes:

     Missed clinical cues

     Delayed or inadequate responses

     Emotional unavailability

These subtle forms of impairment can negatively affect treatment outcomes and client safety.

 

Ethical Breaches

Burnout increases the likelihood of:

     Boundary violations

     Inconsistent professional behaviour

     Reduced adherence to ethical standards

Importantly, these breaches are often unintentional, emerging from reduced capacity rather than deliberate misconduct.

 

Clinical Indicators of Ethical Risk

Early identification is critical, as ethical risk often begins before overt burnout is recognised.

Emotional Exhaustion

     Feeling drained before or during sessions

     Reduced emotional availability

     Increased irritability or frustration

 

Detachment from Clients

     Reduced empathy or emotional responsiveness

     Viewing clients as tasks rather than individuals

     Avoidance of complex or demanding cases

 

Cognitive Fatigue

     Difficulty concentrating

     Slower decision-making

     Increased likelihood of oversight or error

 

Micro Case Analysis

Case 1: Boundary Crossing Due to Overload

A therapist working under sustained workload pressure begins extending session times irregularly, responding to client messages outside agreed hours, and blurring professional boundaries.

Analysis:

     Reduced self-regulation due to fatigue

     Difficulty maintaining consistent limits

     Increased risk of dependency and role confusion

Ethical Risk: Boundary violation driven by impaired capacity

 

Case 2: Missed Warning Signs in Therapy

A therapist experiencing cognitive fatigue overlooks subtle indicators of client deterioration (e.g., increased withdrawal, indirect references to distress).

Analysis:

     Reduced attentional capacity

     Impaired clinical judgment

     Delayed intervention

Ethical Risk: Failure to provide adequate care and protection

 

Supervision and Early Ethical Intervention

Burnout-related ethical risks are often best addressed through early external input.

The European Federation of Psychologists’ Associations and European Association for Psychotherapy frameworks emphasise that therapists should:

     Seek supervision when functioning is compromised

     Reflect on their capacity to practice safely

     Adjust workload when necessary

Supervision plays a key role in:

     Identifying blind spots

     Preventing escalation of impairment

     Supporting ethical decision-making

Failure to act on early warning signs may increase the likelihood of harm and constitute a breach of professional responsibility.

 

Ethical Reflection & Practice Check

     Which early signs of impairment are easiest for you to overlook?

     At what point would you consider your functioning ethically compromised?

     What would prevent you from taking action—and how would you address that?