
Ethical Considerations of Transference and Countertransference
$45.00
Transference and countertransference are natural occurrences within the interpersonal relationship between client and therapist. Gaining an understanding of how these phenomena occur in therapy and everyday life encourages clinicians to be more fully attuned to their clients and track important meanings in the work. This training will explain these events and illustrate them in terms of how they manifest in therapy. Emphasis on how to stay “on track” during these unconscious processes will be shared. The discussion will also examine how the therapist can understand and manage their own experiences of countertransference. Clinicians will be able to explore these meanings with their clients, both directly and indirectly, in a manner that aids in enhancing the therapeutic relationship and client growth.
Upon completion of the training, participants will be able to:
- Describe examples of transference and countertransference in therapy.
- Identify clinical practice situations that reflect transference and countertransference processes.
- Apply ethical and clinical recommendations for addressing and managing transference and countertransference processes.
Social workers completing this course receive 3 Ethics asynchronous continuing education credits.
For other board approvals, this course qualifies for 3 hours of Ethics continuing education training.
Course Instructor: Diane Bigler, LCSW, LSCSW
Recording Date: 10/26/2024
Recorded Live Webinar with downloadable presentation slides and/or handouts, evaluation, and a required quiz. The learner is required to pass with a 70% or higher to achieve the CE certificate of completion. The learner is able to reset the test until a satisfactory score is achieved. CE Training Workshops, LLC, provider #1770, is approved as an ACE provider to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Regulatory boards are the final authority on courses accepted for continuing education credit. ACE provider approval period: 8/2/2022 – 8/2/2025. CE Training Workshops, LLC has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 7091. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. CE Training Workshops, LLC is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs. System Requirements: Firefox, Chrome, Brave, Safari, Edge on any modern operating system (Windows, MacOS, Linux, Android, iOS). A desktop browser is recommended. We do not provide support resources for issues encountered using a mobile device. For more information about our policies and board approval statements, please visit our FAQS page.
Diane Bigler, LCSW, LSCSW, is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in Missouri and Kansas with over 25 years of experience in the mental health field.
Ethical Considerations of Transference and Countertransference (3HR) Syllabus
I. Definitions and Clinical Examples
- Transference: client projects feelings from past relationships onto the therapist
- Countertransference: therapist’s emotional responses influenced by their own experiences
- Examples include romantic attraction, parental idealization, and unresolved resentment
- Practice scenarios highlight subtle and overt manifestations in therapy
II. Understanding Transference
- Originates from early attachments and past relationships
- May present as romantic feelings, idealization, anger, or dependency
- Can be therapeutic when recognized and explored with care
- Requires attunement, nonjudgment, and curiosity from the therapist
III. Exploring Countertransference
- Includes both conscious and unconscious emotional reactions
- Totalistic view includes all therapist reactions—positive or negative
- Reactions may hinder or help therapy depending on awareness and management
- Subjective (therapist-driven) vs. objective (client-evoked) distinctions
IV. Signs and Manifestations of Countertransference
- Excessive liking or dislike for a client
- Over-identification, protectiveness, or emotional reactivity
- Feeling preoccupied, distracted, or resistant during sessions
- Therapist dreams, avoidance, or urges to over-help the client
V. Ethical Risks and Boundaries
- Ethical codes address professional boundaries, self-disclosure, and conflicts of interest
- Use of supervision and consultation as ethical safeguard
- Risks include abandonment, privacy violations, and dual relationships
- Countertransference can impair judgment and clinical neutrality
VI. Addressing Transference in Practice
- Use gentle, relational approaches to explore transference themes
- Avoid labeling or pathologizing the client’s responses
- Psychoeducation and reflective questioning as tools
- Timing and safety of the clinical relationship must guide disclosure
VII. Addressing Countertransference
- Engage in self-reflection and supervision to increase awareness
- Distinguish between therapeutic use of self and unresolved issues
- Use cognitive-behavioral tools to challenge thought distortions
- Implement reality-checks and somatic grounding in session
VIII. Supervision and Support
- Supervision improves boundary management and reduces burnout
- Case consultation offers insight into blind spots and reactions
- Encourages team collaboration and emotional resilience
- Examples include Reality View Approach and countertransference journaling
IX. Clinical Case Studies and Lessons
- Review of ethical violations stemming from unaddressed countertransference
- Case examples show emotional entanglement, poor documentation, and abrupt termination
- Outcomes demonstrate licensing board decisions and corrective actions
- Key takeaways include the value of documentation, consultation, and client-centered care
X. Tools, Resources, and Reflective Practice
- Transference and countertransference inventories and worksheets
- Reflection prompts to explore emotional reactions to clients
- Questions to map relational patterns and improve therapeutic presence
- Curated list of articles, videos, and guides for further professional development