
Code of Ethics
of the
National Association of Social
Workers
Approved by the 1996 NASW
Delegate Assembly and revised by the
1999 NASW Delegate Assembly
Preamble
The primary mission of the social
work profession is to enhance human
well-being and help meet the basic
human needs of all people, with
particular attention to the needs
and empowerment of people who
are vulnerable, oppressed,
and living in poverty. A historic
and defining feature of social work
is the profession's focus on
individual well-being in a social
context and the well-being of
society. Fundamental to social work
is attention to the environmental
forces that create, contribute to,
and address problems in living.
Social workers promote social
justice and social change with and
on behalf of clients. "Clients"
is used inclusively to refer to
individuals, families, groups,
organizations, and communities.
Social workers are sensitive to
cultural and ethnic diversity and
strive to end discrimination,
oppression, poverty, and other forms
of social injustice. These
activities may be in the form of
direct practice, community
organizing, supervision,
consultation, administration,
advocacy, social and political
action, policy development and
implementation, education, and
research and evaluation. Social
workers seek to enhance the capacity
of people to address their own
needs. Social workers also seek to
promote the responsiveness of
organizations, communities, and
other social institutions to
individuals' needs and social
problems.
The mission of the social work
profession is rooted in a set of
core values. These core values,
embraced by social workers
throughout the profession's history,
are the foundation of social work's
unique purpose and perspective:
- service
- social justice
- dignity and worth of the
person
- importance of human
relationships
- integrity
- competence.
This constellation of core
values reflects what is unique to
the social work profession. Core
values, and the principles that flow
from them, must be balanced within
the context and complexity of the
human experience.
Professional ethics are at the
core of social work. The profession
has an obligation to articulate its
basic values, ethical principles,
and ethical standards. The NASW
Code of Ethics sets forth these
values, principles, and standards to
guide social workers' conduct. The
Code is relevant to all social
workers and social work students,
regardless of their professional
functions, the settings in which
they work, or the populations they
serve.
The NASW Code of Ethics
serves six purposes:
- The Code identifies
core values on which social
work's mission is based.
- The Code summarizes
broad ethical principles that
reflect the profession's core
values and establishes a set of
specific ethical standards that
should be used to guide social
work practice.
- The Code is designed
to help social workers identify
relevant considerations when
professional obligations
conflict or ethical
uncertainties arise.
- The Code provides
ethical standards to which the
general public can hold the
social work profession
accountable.
- The Code socializes
practitioners new to the field
to social work's mission,
values, ethical principles, and
ethical standards.
- The Code articulates
standards that the social work
profession itself can use to
assess whether social workers
have engaged in unethical
conduct. NASW has formal
procedures to adjudicate ethics
complaints filed against its
members.* In subscribing to this
Code, social workers are
required to cooperate in its
implementation, participate in
NASW adjudication proceedings,
and abide by any NASW
disciplinary rulings or
sanctions based on it.
*For information on NASW
adjudication procedures, see NASW
Procedures for the Adjudication of
Grievances.
The Code offers a set of
values, principles, and standards to
guide decision making and conduct
when ethical issues arise. It does
not provide a set of rules that
prescribe how social workers should
act in all situations.
Specific applications of the Code
must take into account the context
in which it is being considered and
the possibility of conflicts among
the Code's values,
principles, and standards. Ethical
responsibilities flow from all human
relationships, from the personal and
familial to the social and
professional.
Further, the NASW Code of
Ethics does not specify which
values, principles, and standards
are most important and ought to
outweigh others in instances when
they conflict. Reasonable
differences of opinion can and do
exist among social workers with
respect to the ways in which values,
ethical principles, and ethical
standards should be rank ordered
when they conflict. Ethical decision
making in a given situation must
apply the informed judgment of the
individual social worker and should
also consider how the issues would
be judged in a peer review process
where the ethical standards of the
profession would be applied.
Ethical decision making is a
process. There are many instances in
social work where simple answers are
not available to resolve complex
ethical issues. Social workers
should take into consideration all
the values, principles, and
standards in this Code that
are relevant to any situation in
which ethical judgment is warranted.
Social workers' decisions and
actions should be consistent with
the spirit as well as the letter of
this Code.
In addition to this Code,
there are many other sources of
information about ethical thinking
that may be useful. Social workers
should consider ethical theory and
principles generally, social work
theory and research, laws,
regulations, agency policies, and
other relevant codes of ethics,
recognizing that among codes of
ethics social workers should
consider the NASW Code of Ethics
as their primary source. Social
workers also should be aware of the
impact on ethical decision making of
their clients' and their own
personal values and cultural and
religious beliefs and practices.
They should be aware of any
conflicts between personal and
professional values and deal with
them responsibly. For additional
guidance social workers should
consult the relevant literature on
professional ethics and ethical
decision making and seek appropriate
consultation when faced with ethical
dilemmas. This may involve
consultation with an agency-based or
social work organization's ethics
committee, a regulatory body,
knowledgeable colleagues,
supervisors, or legal counsel.
Instances may arise when social
workers' ethical obligations
conflict with agency policies or
relevant laws or regulations. When
such conflicts occur, social workers
must make a responsible effort to
resolve the conflict in a manner
that is consistent with the values,
principles, and standards expressed
in this Code. If a reasonable
resolution of the conflict does not
appear possible, social workers
should seek proper consultation
before making a decision.
The NASW Code of Ethics is
to be used by NASW and by
individuals, agencies,
organizations, and bodies (such as
licensing and regulatory boards,
professional liability insurance
providers, courts of law, agency
boards of directors, government
agencies, and other professional
groups) that choose to adopt it or
use it as a frame of reference.
Violation of standards in this
Code does not automatically
imply legal liability or violation
of the law. Such determination can
only be made in the context of legal
and judicial proceedings. Alleged
violations of the Code would
be subject to a peer review process.
Such processes are generally
separate from legal or
administrative procedures and
insulated from legal review or
proceedings to allow the profession
to counsel and discipline its own
members.
A code of ethics cannot guarantee
ethical behavior. Moreover, a code
of ethics cannot resolve all ethical
issues or disputes or capture the
richness and complexity involved in
striving to make responsible choices
within a moral community. Rather, a
code of ethics sets forth values,
ethical principles, and ethical
standards to which professionals
aspire and by which their actions
can be judged. Social workers'
ethical behavior should result from
their personal commitment to engage
in ethical practice. The NASW
Code of Ethics reflects the
commitment of all social workers to
uphold the profession's values and
to act ethically. Principles and
standards must be applied by
individuals of good character who
discern moral questions and, in good
faith, seek to make reliable ethical
judgments.
The following broad ethical
principles are based on social
work's core values of service,
social justice, dignity and worth of
the person, importance of human
relationships, integrity, and
competence. These principles set
forth ideals to which all social
workers should aspire.
Value: Service
Ethical Principle:
Social workers' primary goal is to
help people in need and to address
social problems.
Social workers elevate service to
others above self-interest. Social
workers draw on their knowledge,
values, and skills to help people in
need and to address social problems.
Social workers are encouraged to
volunteer some portion of their
professional skills with no
expectation of significant financial
return (pro bono service).
Value: Social Justice
Ethical Principle:
Social workers challenge social
injustice.
Social workers pursue social
change, particularly with and
on behalf of vulnerable and
oppressed individuals and groups of
people. Social workers' social
change efforts are focused primarily
on issues of poverty, unemployment,
discrimination, and other forms
of social injustice. These
activities seek to promote
sensitivity to and knowledge about
oppression and cultural and
ethnic diversity. Social
workers strive to ensure access to
needed information, services, and
resources; equality of opportunity;
and meaningful participation in
decision making for all people.
Value: Dignity and
Worth of the Person
Ethical Principle:
Social workers respect the inherent
dignity and worth of the person.
Social workers treat each person
in a caring and respectful
fashion, mindful of individual
differences and cultural and ethnic
diversity. Social workers promote
clients' socially responsible
self-determination. Social workers
seek to enhance clients' capacity
and opportunity to change and to
address their own needs. Social
workers are cognizant of their dual
responsibility to clients and to the
broader society. They seek to
resolve conflicts between clients'
interests and the broader society's
interests in a socially responsible
manner consistent with the values,
ethical principles, and ethical
standards of the profession.
Value: Importance of
Human Relationships
Ethical Principle:
Social workers recognize the central
importance of human relationships.
Social workers understand that
relationships between and among
people are an important vehicle for
change. Social workers engage people
as partners in the helping process.
Social workers seek to strengthen
relationships among people in a
purposeful effort to promote,
restore, maintain, and enhance the
well-being of individuals, families,
social groups, organizations, and
communities.
Value: Integrity
Ethical Principle:
Social workers behave in a
trustworthy manner.
Social workers are continually
aware of the profession's mission,
values, ethical principles, and
ethical standards and practice in a
manner consistent with them. Social
workers act honestly and responsibly
and promote ethical practices on the
part of the organizations with which
they are affiliated.
Value: Competence
Ethical Principle:
Social workers practice within their
areas of competence and develop and
enhance their professional
expertise.
Social workers continually strive
to increase their professional
knowledge and skills and to apply
them in practice. Social workers
should aspire to contribute to the
knowledge base of the profession.
The following ethical standards
are relevant to the professional
activities of all social workers.
These standards concern (1) social
workers' ethical responsibilities to
clients, (2) social workers' ethical
responsibilities to colleagues, (3)
social workers' ethical
responsibilities in practice
settings, (4) social workers'
ethical responsibilities as
professionals, (5) social workers'
ethical responsibilities to the
social work profession, and (6)
social workers' ethical
responsibilities to the broader
society.
Some of the standards that follow
are enforceable guidelines for
professional conduct, and some are
aspirational. The extent to which
each standard is enforceable is a
matter of professional judgment to
be exercised by those responsible
for reviewing alleged violations of
ethical standards.
1. Social Workers' Ethical
Responsibilities to Clients
1.01 Commitment to Clients
Social workers' primary
responsibility is to promote the
well-being of clients. In general,
clients' interests are primary.
However, social workers'
responsibility to the larger society
or specific legal obligations may on
limited occasions supersede the
loyalty owed clients, and clients
should be so advised. (Examples
include when a social worker is
required by law to report that a
client has abused a child or has
threatened to harm self or others.)
1.02 Self-Determination
Social workers respect and
promote the right of clients to
self-determination and assist
clients in their efforts to identify
and clarify their goals. Social
workers may limit clients' right to
self-determination when, in the
social workers' professional
judgment, clients' actions or
potential actions pose a serious,
foreseeable, and imminent risk to
themselves or others.
1.03 Informed Consent
(a) Social workers should provide
services to clients only in the
context of a professional
relationship based, when
appropriate, on valid informed
consent. Social workers should use
clear and understandable language to
inform clients of the purpose of the
services, risks related to the
services, limits to services because
of the requirements of a third-party
payer, relevant costs, reasonable
alternatives, clients' right to
refuse or withdraw consent, and the
time frame covered by the consent.
Social workers should provide
clients with an opportunity to ask
questions.
(b) In instances when clients are
not literate or have difficulty
understanding the primary language
used in the practice setting, social
workers should take steps to ensure
clients' comprehension. This may
include providing clients with a
detailed verbal explanation or
arranging for a qualified
interpreter or translator whenever
possible.
(c) In instances when clients
lack the capacity to provide
informed consent, social workers
should protect clients' interests by
seeking permission from an
appropriate third party, informing
clients consistent with the clients'
level of understanding. In such
instances social workers should seek
to ensure that the third party acts
in a manner consistent with clients'
wishes and interests. Social workers
should take reasonable steps to
enhance such clients' ability to
give informed consent.
(d) In instances when clients are
receiving services involuntarily,
social workers should provide
information about the nature and
extent of services and about the
extent of clients' right to refuse
service.
(e) Social workers who provide
services via electronic media (such
as computer, telephone, radio, and
television) should inform recipients
of the limitations and risks
associated with such services.
(f) Social workers should obtain
clients' informed consent before
audiotaping or videotaping clients
or permitting observation of
services to clients by a third
party.
1.04 Competence
(a) Social workers should provide
services and represent themselves as
competent only within the boundaries
of their education, training,
license, certification, consultation
received, supervised experience, or
other relevant professional
experience.
(b) Social workers should provide
services in substantive areas or use
intervention techniques or
approaches that are new to them only
after engaging in appropriate study,
training, consultation, and
supervision from people who are
competent in those interventions or
techniques.
(c) When generally recognized
standards do not exist with respect
to an emerging area of practice,
social workers should exercise
careful judgment and take
responsible steps (including
appropriate education, research,
training, consultation, and
supervision) to ensure the
competence of their work and to
protect clients from harm.
1.05 Cultural Competence and
Social Diversity
(a) Social workers should
understand culture and its function
in human behavior and society,
recognizing the strengths that exist
in all cultures.
(b) Social workers should have a
knowledge base of their clients'
cultures and be able to demonstrate
competence in the provision of
services that are sensitive to
clients' cultures and to differences
among people and cultural groups.
(c) Social workers should obtain
education about and seek to
understand the nature of social
diversity and oppression with
respect to race, ethnicity, national
origin, color, sex, sexual
orientation, age, marital status,
political belief, religion, and
mental or physical disability.
1.06 Conflicts of Interest
(a) Social workers should be
alert to and avoid conflicts of
interest that interfere with the
exercise of professional discretion
and impartial judgment. Social
workers should inform clients when a
real or potential conflict of
interest arises and take reasonable
steps to resolve the issue in a
manner that makes the clients'
interests primary and protects
clients' interests to the greatest
extent possible. In some cases,
protecting clients' interests may
require termination of the
professional relationship with
proper referral of the client.
(b) Social workers should not
take unfair advantage of any
professional relationship or exploit
others to further their personal,
religious, political, or business
interests.
(c) Social workers should not
engage in dual or multiple
relationships with clients or former
clients in which there is a risk of
exploitation or potential harm to
the client. In instances when dual
or multiple relationships are
unavoidable, social workers should
take steps to protect clients and
are responsible for setting clear,
appropriate, and culturally
sensitive boundaries. (Dual or
multiple relationships occur when
social workers relate to clients in
more than one relationship, whether
professional, social, or business.
Dual or multiple relationships can
occur simultaneously or
consecutively.)
(d) When social workers provide
services to two or more people who
have a relationship with each other
(for example, couples, family
members), social workers should
clarify with all parties which
individuals will be considered
clients and the nature of social
workers' professional obligations to
the various individuals who are
receiving services. Social workers
who anticipate a conflict of
interest among the individuals
receiving services or who anticipate
having to perform in potentially
conflicting roles (for example, when
a social worker is asked to testify
in a child custody dispute or
divorce proceedings involving
clients) should clarify their role
with the parties involved and take
appropriate action to minimize any
conflict of interest.
1.07 Privacy and Confidentiality
(a) Social workers should respect
clients' right to privacy. Social
workers should not solicit private
information from clients unless it
is essential to providing services
or conducting social work evaluation
or research. Once private
information is shared, standards of
confidentiality apply.
(b) Social workers may disclose
confidential information when
appropriate with valid consent from
a client or a person legally
authorized to consent on behalf of a
client.
(c) Social workers should protect
the confidentiality of all
information obtained in the course
of professional service, except for
compelling professional reasons. The
general expectation that social
workers will keep information
confidential does not apply when
disclosure is necessary to prevent
serious, foreseeable, and imminent
harm to a client or other
identifiable person. In all
instances, social workers should
disclose the least amount of
confidential information necessary
to achieve the desired purpose; only
information that is directly
relevant to the purpose for which
the disclosure is made should be
revealed.
(d) Social workers should inform
clients, to the extent possible,
about the disclosure of confidential
information and the potential
consequences, when feasible before
the disclosure is made. This applies
whether social workers disclose
confidential information on the
basis of a legal requirement or
client consent.
(e) Social workers should discuss
with clients and other interested
parties the nature of
confidentiality and limitations of
clients' right to confidentiality.
Social workers should review with
clients circumstances where
confidential information may be
requested and where disclosure of
confidential information may be
legally required. This discussion
should occur as soon as possible in
the social worker-client
relationship and as needed
throughout the course of the
relationship.
(f) When social workers provide
counseling services to families,
couples, or groups, social workers
should seek agreement among the
parties involved concerning each
individual's right to
confidentiality and obligation to
preserve the confidentiality of
information shared by others. Social
workers should inform participants
in family, couples, or group
counseling that social workers
cannot guarantee that all
participants will honor such
agreements.
(g) Social workers should inform
clients involved in family, couples,
marital, or group counseling of the
social worker's, employer's, and
agency's policy concerning the
social worker's disclosure of
confidential information among the
parties involved in the counseling.
(h) Social workers should not
disclose confidential information to
third-party payers unless clients
have authorized such disclosure.
(i) Social workers should not
discuss confidential information in
any setting unless privacy can be
ensured. Social workers should not
discuss confidential information in
public or semipublic areas such as
hallways, waiting rooms, elevators,
and restaurants.
(j) Social workers should protect
the confidentiality of clients
during legal proceedings to the
extent permitted by law. When a
court of law or other legally
authorized body orders social
workers to disclose confidential or
privileged information without a
client's consent and such disclosure
could cause harm to the client,
social workers should request that
the court withdraw the order or
limit the order as narrowly as
possible or maintain the records
under seal, unavailable for public
inspection.
(k) Social workers should protect
the confidentiality of clients when
responding to requests from members
of the media.
(l) Social workers should protect
the confidentiality of clients'
written and electronic records and
other sensitive information. Social
workers should take reasonable steps
to ensure that clients' records are
stored in a secure location and that
clients' records are not available
to others who are not authorized to
have access.
(m) Social workers should take
precautions to ensure and maintain
the confidentiality of information
transmitted to other parties through
the use of computers, electronic
mail, facsimile machines, telephones
and telephone answering machines,
and other electronic or computer
technology. Disclosure of
identifying information should be
avoided whenever possible.
(n) Social workers should
transfer or dispose of clients'
records in a manner that protects
clients' confidentiality and is
consistent with state statutes
governing records and social work
licensure.
(o) Social workers should take
reasonable precautions to protect
client confidentiality in the event
of the social worker's termination
of practice, incapacitation, or
death.
(p) Social workers should not
disclose identifying information
when discussing clients for teaching
or training purposes unless the
client has consented to disclosure
of confidential information.
(q) Social workers should not
disclose identifying information
when discussing clients with
consultants unless the client has
consented to disclosure of
confidential information or there is
a compelling need for such
disclosure.
(r) Social workers should protect
the confidentiality of deceased
clients consistent with the
preceding standards.
1.08 Access to Records
(a) Social workers should provide
clients with reasonable access to
records concerning the clients.
Social workers who are concerned
that clients' access to their
records could cause serious
misunderstanding or harm to the
client should provide assistance in
interpreting the records and
consultation with the client
regarding the records. Social
workers should limit clients' access
to their records, or portions of
their records, only in exceptional
circumstances when there is
compelling evidence that such access
would cause serious harm to the
client. Both clients' requests and
the rationale for withholding some
or all of the record should be
documented in clients' files.
(b) When providing clients with
access to their records, social
workers should take steps to protect
the confidentiality of other
individuals identified or discussed
in such records.
1.09 Sexual Relationships
(a) Social workers should under
no circumstances engage in sexual
activities or sexual contact with
current clients, whether such
contact is consensual or forced.
(b) Social workers should not
engage in sexual activities or
sexual contact with clients'
relatives or other individuals with
whom clients maintain a close
personal relationship when there is
a risk of exploitation or potential
harm to the client. Sexual activity
or sexual contact with clients'
relatives or other individuals with
whom clients maintain a personal
relationship has the potential to be
harmful to the client and may make
it difficult for the social worker
and client to maintain appropriate
professional boundaries. Social
workers--not their clients, their
clients' relatives, or other
individuals with whom the client
maintains a personal
relationship--assume the full burden
for setting clear, appropriate, and
culturally sensitive boundaries.
(c) Social workers should not
engage in sexual activities or
sexual contact with former clients
because of the potential for harm to
the client. If social workers engage
in conduct contrary to this
prohibition or claim that an
exception to this prohibition is
warranted because of extraordinary
circumstances, it is social
workers--not their clients--who
assume the full burden of
demonstrating that the former client
has not been exploited, coerced, or
manipulated, intentionally or
unintentionally.
(d) Social workers should not
provide clinical services to
individuals with whom they have had
a prior sexual relationship.
Providing clinical services to a
former sexual partner has the
potential to be harmful to the
individual and is likely to make it
difficult for the social worker and
individual to maintain appropriate
professional boundaries.
1.10 Physical Contact
Social workers should not engage
in physical contact with clients
when there is a possibility of
psychological harm to the client as
a result of the contact (such as
cradling or caressing clients).
Social workers who engage in
appropriate physical contact with
clients are responsible for setting
clear, appropriate, and culturally
sensitive boundaries that govern
such physical contact.
1.11 Sexual Harassment
Social workers should not
sexually harass clients. Sexual
harassment includes sexual advances,
sexual solicitation, requests for
sexual favors, and other verbal or
physical conduct of a sexual nature.
1.12 Derogatory Language
Social workers should not use
derogatory language in their written
or verbal communications to or about
clients. Social workers should use
accurate and respectful language in
all communications to and about
clients.
1.13 Payment for Services
(a) When setting fees, social
workers should ensure that the fees
are fair, reasonable, and
commensurate with the services
performed. Consideration should be
given to clients' ability to pay.
(b) Social workers should avoid
accepting goods or services from
clients as payment for professional
services. Bartering arrangements,
particularly involving services,
create the potential for conflicts
of interest, exploitation, and
inappropriate boundaries in social
workers' relationships with clients.
Social workers should explore and
may participate in bartering only in
very limited circumstances when it
can be demonstrated that such
arrangements are an accepted
practice among professionals in the
local community, considered to be
essential for the provision of
services, negotiated without
coercion, and entered into at the
client's initiative and with the
client's informed consent. Social
workers who accept goods or services
from clients as payment for
professional services assume the
full burden of demonstrating that
this arrangement will not be
detrimental to the client or the
professional relationship.
(c) Social workers should not
solicit a private fee or other
remuneration for providing services
to clients who are entitled to such
available services through the
social workers' employer or agency.
1.14 Clients Who Lack
Decision-Making Capacity
When social workers act on behalf
of clients who lack the capacity to
make informed decisions, social
workers should take reasonable steps
to safeguard the interests and
rights of those clients.
1.15 Interruption of Services
Social workers should make
reasonable efforts to ensure
continuity of services in the event
that services are interrupted by
factors such as unavailability,
relocation, illness, disability, or
death.
1.16 Termination of Services
(a) Social workers should
terminate services to clients and
professional relationships with them
when such services and relationships
are no longer required or no longer
serve the clients' needs or
interests.
(b) Social workers should take
reasonable steps to avoid abandoning
clients who are still in need of
services. Social workers should
withdraw services precipitously only
under unusual circumstances, giving
careful consideration to all factors
in the situation and taking care to
minimize possible adverse effects.
Social workers should assist in
making appropriate arrangements for
continuation of services when
necessary.
(c) Social workers in
fee-for-service settings may
terminate services to clients who
are not paying an overdue balance if
the financial contractual
arrangements have been made clear to
the client, if the client does not
pose an imminent danger to self or
others, and if the clinical and
other consequences of the current
nonpayment have been addressed and
discussed with the client.
(d) Social workers should not
terminate services to pursue a
social, financial, or sexual
relationship with a client.
(e) Social workers who anticipate
the termination or interruption of
services to clients should notify
clients promptly and seek the
transfer, referral, or continuation
of services in relation to the
clients' needs and preferences.
(f) Social workers who are
leaving an employment setting should
inform clients of appropriate
options for the continuation of
services and of the benefits and
risks of the options.
2. Social Workers' Ethical
Responsibilities to Colleagues
2.01 Respect
(a) Social workers should treat
colleagues with respect and should
represent accurately and fairly the
qualifications, views, and
obligations of colleagues.
(b) Social workers should avoid
unwarranted negative criticism of
colleagues in communications with
clients or with other professionals.
Unwarranted negative criticism may
include demeaning comments that
refer to colleagues' level of
competence or to indi-viduals'
attributes such as race, ethnicity,
national origin, color, sex, sexual
orientation, age, marital status,
political belief, religion, and
mental or physical disability.
(c) Social workers should
cooperate with social work
colleagues and with colleagues of
other professions when such
cooperation serves the well-being of
clients.
2.02 Confidentiality
Social workers should respect
confidential information shared by
colleagues in the course of their
professional relationships and
transactions. Social workers should
ensure that such colleagues
understand social workers'
obligation to respect
confidentiality and any exceptions
related to it.
2.03 Interdisciplinary
Collaboration
(a) Social workers who are
members of an interdisciplinary team
should participate in and contribute
to decisions that affect the
well-being of clients by drawing on
the perspectives, values, and
experiences of the social work
profession. Professional and ethical
obligations of the interdisciplinary
team as a whole and of its
individual members should be clearly
established.
(b) Social workers for whom a
team decision raises ethical
concerns should attempt to resolve
the disagreement through appropriate
channels. If the disagreement cannot
be resolved, social workers should
pursue other avenues to address
their concerns consistent with
client well-being.
2.04 Disputes Involving
Colleagues
(a) Social workers should not
take advantage of a dispute between
a colleague and an employer to
obtain a position or otherwise
advance the social workers' own
interests.
(b) Social workers should not
exploit clients in disputes with
colleagues or engage clients in any
inappropriate discussion of
conflicts between social workers and
their colleagues.
2.05 Consultation
(a) Social workers should seek
the advice and counsel of colleagues
whenever such consultation is in the
best interests of clients.
(b) Social workers should keep
themselves informed about
colleagues' areas of expertise and
competencies. Social workers should
seek consultation only from
colleagues who have demonstrated
knowledge, expertise, and competence
related to the subject of the
consultation.
(c) When consulting with
colleagues about clients, social
workers should disclose the least
amount of information necessary to
achieve the purposes of the
consultation.
2.06 Referral for Services
(a) Social workers should refer
clients to other professionals when
the other professionals' specialized
knowledge or expertise is needed to
serve clients fully or when social
workers believe that they are not
being effective or making reasonable
progress with clients and that
additional service is required.
(b) Social workers who refer
clients to other professionals
should take appropriate steps to
facilitate an orderly transfer of
responsibility. Social workers who
refer clients to other professionals
should disclose, with clients'
consent, all pertinent information
to the new service providers.
(c) Social workers are prohibited
from giving or receiving payment for
a referral when no professional
service is provided by the referring
social worker.
2.07 Sexual Relationships
(a) Social workers who function
as supervisors or educators should
not engage in sexual activities or
contact with supervisees, students,
trainees, or other colleagues over
whom they exercise professional
authority.
(b) Social workers should avoid
engaging in sexual relationships
with colleagues when there is
potential for a conflict of
interest. Social workers who become
involved in, or anticipate becoming
involved in, a sexual relationship
with a colleague have a duty to
transfer professional
responsibilities, when necessary, to
avoid a conflict of interest.
2.08 Sexual Harassment
Social workers should not
sexually harass supervisees,
students, trainees, or colleagues.
Sexual harassment includes sexual
advances, sexual solicitation,
requests for sexual favors, and
other verbal or physical conduct of
a sexual nature.
2.09 Impairment of Colleagues
(a) Social workers who have
direct knowledge of a social work
colleague's impairment that is due
to personal problems, psychosocial
distress, substance abuse, or mental
health difficulties and that
interferes with practice
effectiveness should consult with
that colleague when feasible and
assist the colleague in taking
remedial action.
(b) Social workers who believe
that a social work colleague's
impairment interferes with practice
effectiveness and that the colleague
has not taken adequate steps to
address the impairment should take
action through appropriate channels
established by employers, agencies,
NASW, licensing and regulatory
bodies, and other professional
organizations.
2.10 Incompetence of Colleagues
(a) Social workers who have
direct knowledge of a social work
colleague's incompetence should
consult with that colleague when
feasible and assist the colleague in
taking remedial action.
(b) Social workers who believe
that a social work colleague is
incompetent and has not taken
adequate steps to address the
incompetence should take action
through appropriate channels
established by employers, agencies,
NASW, licensing and regulatory
bodies, and other professional
organizations.
2.11 Unethical Conduct of
Colleagues
(a) Social workers should take
adequate measures to discourage,
prevent, expose, and correct the
unethical conduct of colleagues.
(b) Social workers should be
knowledgeable about established
policies and procedures for handling
concerns about colleagues' unethical
behavior. Social workers should be
familiar with national, state, and
local procedures for handling ethics
complaints. These include policies
and procedures created by NASW,
licensing and regulatory bodies,
employers, agencies, and other
professional organizations.
(c) Social workers who believe
that a colleague has acted
unethically should seek resolution
by discussing their concerns with
the colleague when feasible and when
such discussion is likely to be
productive.
(d) When necessary, social
workers who believe that a colleague
has acted unethically should take
action through appropriate formal
channels (such as contacting a state
licensing board or regulatory body,
an NASW committee on inquiry, or
other professional ethics
committees).
(e) Social workers should defend
and assist colleagues who are
unjustly charged with unethical
conduct.
3. Social Workers' Ethical
Responsibilities in Practice
Settings
3.01 Supervision and
Consultation
(a) Social workers who provide
supervision or consultation should
have the necessary knowledge and
skill to supervise or consult
appropriately and should do so only
within their areas of knowledge and
competence.
(b) Social workers who provide
supervision or consultation are
responsible for setting clear,
appropriate, and culturally
sensitive boundaries.
(c) Social workers should not
engage in any dual or multiple
relationships with supervisees in
which there is a risk of
exploitation of or potential harm to
the supervisee.
(d) Social workers who provide
supervision should evaluate
supervisees' performance in a manner
that is fair and respectful.
3.02 Education and Training
(a) Social workers who function
as educators, field instructors for
students, or trainers should provide
instruction only within their areas
of knowledge and competence and
should provide instruction based on
the most current information and
knowledge available in the
profession.
(b) Social workers who function
as educators or field instructors
for students should evaluate
students' performance in a manner
that is fair and respectful.
(c) Social workers who function
as educators or field instructors
for students should take reasonable
steps to ensure that clients are
routinely informed when services are
being provided by students.
(d) Social workers who function
as educators or field instructors
for students should not engage in
any dual or multiple relationships
with students in which there is a
risk of exploitation or potential
harm to the student. Social work
educators and field instructors are
responsible for setting clear,
appropriate, and culturally
sensitive boundaries.
3.03 Performance Evaluation
Social workers who have
responsibility for evaluating the
performance of others should fulfill
such responsibility in a fair and
considerate manner and on the basis
of clearly stated criteria.
3.04 Client Records
(a) Social workers should take
reasonable steps to ensure that
documentation in records is accurate
and reflects the services provided.
(b) Social workers should include
sufficient and timely documentation
in records to facilitate the
delivery of services and to ensure
continuity of services provided to
clients in the future.
(c) Social workers' documentation
should protect clients' privacy to
the extent that is possible and
appropriate and should include only
information that is directly
relevant to the delivery of
services.
(d) Social workers should store
records following the termination of
services to ensure reasonable future
access. Records should be maintained
for the number of years required by
state statutes or relevant
contracts.
3.05 Billing
Social workers should establish
and maintain billing practices that
accurately reflect the nature and
extent of services provided and that
identify who provided the service in
the practice setting.
3.06 Client Transfer
(a) When an individual who is
receiving services from another
agency or colleague contacts a
social worker for services, the
social worker should carefully
consider the client's needs before
agreeing to provide services. To
minimize possible confusion and
conflict, social workers should
discuss with potential clients the
nature of the clients' current
relationship with other service
providers and the implications,
including possible benefits or
risks, of entering into a
relationship with a new service
provider.
(b) If a new client has been
served by another agency or
colleague, social workers should
discuss with the client whether
consultation with the previous
service provider is in the client's
best interest.
3.07 Administration
(a) Social work administrators
should advocate within and outside
their agencies for adequate
resources to meet clients' needs.
(b) Social workers should
advocate for resource allocation
procedures that are open and fair.
When not all clients' needs can be
met, an allocation procedure should
be developed that is
nondiscriminatory and based on
appropriate and consistently applied
principles.
(c) Social workers who are
administrators should take
reasonable steps to ensure that
adequate agency or organizational
resources are available to provide
appropriate staff supervision.
(d) Social work administrators
should take reasonable steps to
ensure that the working environment
for which they are responsible is
consistent with and encourages
compliance with the NASW Code of
Ethics. Social work administrators
should take reasonable steps to
eliminate any conditions in their
organizations that violate,
interfere with, or discourage
compliance with the Code.
3.08 Continuing Education and
Staff Development
Social work administrators and
supervisors should take reasonable
steps to provide or arrange for
continuing education and staff
development for all staff for whom
they are responsible. Continuing
education and staff development
should address current knowledge and
emerging developments related to
social work practice and ethics.
3.09 Commitments to Employers
(a) Social workers generally
should adhere to commitments made to
employers and employing
organizations.
(b) Social workers should work to
improve employing agencies' policies
and procedures and the efficiency
and effectiveness of their services.
(c) Social workers should take
reasonable steps to ensure that
employers are aware of social
workers' ethical obligations as set
forth in the NASW Code of Ethics and
of the implications of those
obligations for social work
practice.
(d) Social workers should not
allow an employing organization's
policies, procedures, regulations,
or administrative orders to
interfere with their ethical
practice of social work. Social
workers should take reasonable steps
to ensure that their employing
organizations' practices are
consistent with the NASW Code of
Ethics.
(e) Social workers should act to
prevent and eliminate discrimination
in the employing organization's work
assignments and in its employment
policies and practices.
(f) Social workers should accept
employment or arrange student field
placements only in organizations
that exercise fair personnel
practices.
(g) Social workers should be
diligent stewards of the resources
of their employing organizations,
wisely conserving funds where
appropriate and never
misappropriating funds or using them
for unintended purposes.
3.10 Labor-Management Disputes
(a) Social workers may engage in
organized action, including the
formation of and participation in
labor unions, to improve services to
clients and working conditions.
(b) The actions of social workers
who are involved in labor-management
disputes, job actions, or labor
strikes should be guided by the
profession's values, ethical
principles, and ethical standards.
Reasonable differences of opinion
exist among social workers
concerning their primary obligation
as professionals during an actual or
threatened labor strike or job
action. Social workers should
carefully examine relevant issues
and their possible impact on clients
before deciding on a course of
action.
4. Social Workers' Ethical
Responsibilities as Professionals
4.01 Competence
(a) Social workers should accept
responsibility or employment only on
the basis of existing competence or
the intention to acquire the
necessary competence.
(b) Social workers should strive
to become and remain proficient in
professional practice and the
performance of professional
functions. Social workers should
critically examine and keep current
with emerging knowledge relevant to
social work. Social workers should
routinely review the professional
literature and participate in
continuing education relevant to
social work practice and social work
ethics.
(c) Social workers should base
practice on recognized knowledge,
including empirically based
knowledge, relevant to social work
and social work ethics.
4.02 Discrimination
Social workers should not
practice, condone, facilitate, or
collaborate with any form of
discrimination on the basis of race,
ethnicity, national origin, color,
sex, sexual orientation, age,
marital status, political belief,
religion, or mental or physical
disability.
4.03 Private Conduct
Social workers should not permit
their private conduct to interfere
with their ability to fulfill their
professional responsibilities.
4.04 Dishonesty, Fraud, and
Deception
Social workers should not
participate in, condone, or be
associated with dishonesty, fraud,
or deception.
4.05 Impairment
(a) Social workers should not
allow their own personal problems,
psychosocial distress, legal
problems, substance abuse, or mental
health difficulties to interfere
with their professional judgment and
performance or to jeopardize the
best interests of people for whom
they have a professional
responsibility.
(b) Social workers whose personal
problems, psychosocial distress,
legal problems, substance abuse, or
mental health difficulties interfere
with their professional judgment and
performance should immediately seek
consultation and take appropriate
remedial action by seeking
professional help, making
adjustments in workload, terminating
practice, or taking any other steps
necessary to protect clients and
others.
4.06 Misrepresentation
(a) Social workers should make
clear distinctions between
statements made and actions engaged
in as a private individual and as a
representative of the social work
profession, a professional social
work organization, or the social
worker's employing agency.
(b) Social workers who speak on
behalf of professional social work
organizations should accurately
represent the official and
authorized positions of the
organizations.
(c) Social workers should ensure
that their representations to
clients, agencies, and the public of
professional qualifications,
credentials, education, competence,
affiliations, services provided, or
results to be achieved are accurate.
Social workers should claim only
those relevant professional
credentials they actually possess
and take steps to correct any
inaccuracies or misrepresentations
of their credentials by others.
4.07 Solicitations
(a) Social workers should not
engage in uninvited solicitation of
potential clients who, because of
their circumstances, are vulnerable
to undue influence, manipulation, or
coercion.
(b) Social workers should not
engage in solicitation of
testimonial endorsements (including
solicitation of consent to use a
client's prior statement as a
testimonial endorsement) from
current clients or from other people
who, because of their particular
circumstances, are vulnerable to
undue influence.
4.08 Acknowledging Credit
(a) Social workers should take
responsibility and credit, including
authorship credit, only for work
they have actually performed and to
which they have contributed.
(b) Social workers should
honestly acknowledge the work of and
the contributions made by others.
5. Social Workers' Ethical
Responsibilities to the Social Work
Profession
5.01 Integrity of the Profession
(a) Social workers should work
toward the maintenance and promotion
of high standards of practice.
(b) Social workers should uphold
and advance the values, ethics,
knowledge, and mission of the
profession. Social workers should
protect, enhance, and improve the
integrity of the profession through
appropriate study and research,
active discussion, and responsible
criticism of the profession.
(c) Social workers should
contribute time and professional
expertise to activities that promote
respect for the value, integrity,
and competence of the social work
profession. These activities may
include teaching, research,
consultation, service, legislative
testimony, presentations in the
community, and participation in
their professional organizations.
(d) Social workers should
contribute to the knowledge base of
social work and share with
colleagues their knowledge related
to practice, research, and ethics.
Social workers should seek to
con-tribute to the profession's
literature and to share their
knowledge at professional meetings
and conferences.
(e) Social workers should act to
prevent the unauthorized and
unqualified practice of social work.
5.02 Evaluation and Research
(a) Social workers should monitor
and evaluate policies, the
implementation of programs, and
practice interventions.
(b) Social workers should promote
and facilitate evaluation and
research to contribute to the
development of knowledge.
(c) Social workers should
critically examine and keep current
with emerging knowledge relevant to
social work and fully use evaluation
and research evidence in their
professional practice.
(d) Social workers engaged in
evaluation or research should
carefully consider possible
consequences and should follow
guidelines developed for the
protection of evaluation and
research participants. Appropriate
institutional review boards should
be consulted.
(e) Social workers engaged in
evaluation or research should obtain
voluntary and written informed
consent from participants, when
appropriate, without any implied or
actual deprivation or penalty for
refusal to participate; without
undue inducement to participate; and
with due regard for participants'
well-being, privacy, and dignity.
Informed consent should include
information about the nature,
extent, and duration of the
participation requested and
disclosure of the risks and benefits
of participation in the research.
(f) When evaluation or research
participants are incapable of giving
informed consent, social workers
should provide an appropriate
explanation to the participants,
obtain the participants' assent to
the extent they are able, and obtain
written consent from an appropriate
proxy.
(g) Social workers should never
design or conduct evaluation or
research that does not use consent
procedures, such as certain forms of
naturalistic observation and
archival research, unless rigorous
and responsible review of the
research has found it to be
justified because of its prospective
scientific, educational, or applied
value and unless equally effective
alternative procedures that do not
involve waiver of consent are not
feasible.
(h) Social workers should inform
participants of their right to
withdraw from evaluation and
research at any time without
penalty.
(i) Social workers should take
appropriate steps to ensure that
participants in evaluation and
research have access to appropriate
supportive services.
(j) Social workers engaged in
evaluation or research should
protect participants from
unwarranted physical or mental
distress, harm, danger, or
deprivation.
(k) Social workers engaged in the
evaluation of services should
discuss collected information only
for professional purposes and only
with people professionally concerned
with this information.
(l) Social workers engaged in
evaluation or research should ensure
the anonymity or confidentiality of
participants and of the data
obtained from them. Social workers
should inform participants of any
limits of confidentiality, the
measures that will be taken to
ensure confidentiality, and when any
records containing research data
will be destroyed.
(m) Social workers who report
evaluation and research results
should protect participants'
confidentiality by omitting
identifying information unless
proper consent has been obtained
authorizing disclosure.
(n) Social workers should report
evaluation and research findings
accurately. They should not
fabricate or falsify results and
should take steps to correct any
errors later found in published data
using standard publication methods.
(o) Social workers engaged in
evaluation or research should be
alert to and avoid conflicts of
interest and dual relationships with
participants, should inform
participants when a real or
potential conflict of interest
arises, and should take steps to
resolve the issue in a manner that
makes participants' interests
primary.
(p) Social workers should educate
themselves, their students, and
their colleagues about responsible
research practices.
6. Social Workers' Ethical
Responsibilities to the Broader
Society
6.01 Social Welfare
Social workers should promote the
general welfare of society, from
local to global levels, and the
development of people, their
communities, and their environments.
Social workers should advocate for
living conditions conducive to the
fulfillment of basic human needs and
should promote social, economic,
political, and cultural values and
institutions that are compatible
with the realization of social
justice.
6.02 Public Participation
Social workers should facilitate
informed participation by the public
in shaping social policies and
institutions.
6.03 Public Emergencies
Social workers should provide
appropriate professional services in
public emergencies to the greatest
extent possible.
6.04 Social and Political Action
(a) Social workers should engage
in social and political action that
seeks to ensure that all people have
equal access to the resources,
employment, services, and
opportunities they require to meet
their basic human needs and to
develop fully. Social workers should
be aware of the impact of the
political arena on practice and
should advocate for changes in
policy and legislation to improve
social conditions in order to meet
basic human needs and promote social
justice.
(b) Social workers should act to
expand choice and opportunity for
all people, with special regard for
vulnerable, disadvantaged,
oppressed, and exploited people and
groups.
(c) Social workers should promote
conditions that encourage respect
for cultural and social diversity
within the United States and
globally. Social workers should
promote policies and practices that
demonstrate respect for difference,
support the expansion of cultural
knowledge and resources, advocate
for programs and institutions that
demonstrate cultural competence, and
promote policies that safeguard the
rights of and confirm equity and
social justice for all people.
(d) Social workers should act to
prevent and eliminate domination of,
exploitation of, and discrimination
against any person, group, or class
on the basis of race, ethnicity,
national origin, color, sex, sexual
orientation, age, marital status,
political belief, religion, or
mental or physical disability. |