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Conversion “Therapy”: Arizona’s Battle Continues…

Photo by Loren Cutler on Unsplash
Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

The coolest, and most unique thing about the Pima County ordinance is that, unlike many similar ones around the country that target only the minority fraction of conversion “therapy” provders who (unfortunately) have a clinical license, this one doesn’t address who peddles this snake oil — it just says you can’t peddle the snake oil no matter who you are or if you hold a license, which means that 100%, not < 30%, of the predatory people who harm youth and families like this are accountable.

This is why many of us who’ve sat with and studied the language have reached the conclusion that the current bill is totally fine, and, it has the added bonus of actually preventing fanatical and extremist leaders in some “political subdivisions” from trying to do what the original bill would have done by demanding our professions conduct ourselves based on outside interests making demands on our work. This new bill accomplishes this all while not touching Pima County’s right to hold accountable the people who sell snake oil that shatters families and harms our youth. Pima County’s ordinance says nothing about regulating the practice of therapy and, since conversion “therapy” isn’t an accepted or established practice in mental health, a therapist who puts those “services” out there can’t likely hide behind that credential to avoid recourse any more than they would be able to hide behind that credential if they would if they did something else that has such an established history of causing harm, and even death. Legislators, perhaps in haste, have written their own overreaching objective right out of the legislation!

Photo by Dulcey Lima on Unsplash
Excerpts from the American Counseling Association’s Code of Ethics. All six professions licensed by the two boards that oversee mental/behavioral health in Arizona have one, and they all demand we not cause harm.

Therapist. Explorer. Anthro Nerd. Meaning-Maker. PhD student focused on how counselors cope with clinical/ethical mistakes. https://www.recoursecounseling.com

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