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How Can a Clinician Ethically Support a Client Whose Cultural or Spiritual Beliefs Appear to be in Internal Conflict, or in Conflict With the Clinician's Own Values?

Allan Barsky, JD, MSW, PhD

March 13, 2026

Question

How can a clinician ethically support a client whose cultural or spiritual beliefs appear to be in internal conflict, or in conflict with the clinician's own values?

Answer

Ethical practice often requires holding two seemingly opposing truths simultaneously. When a client presents with beliefs, whether rooted in Buddhist philosophy, cultural tradition, or personal conviction, that appear to conflict with one another or with the clinician's own worldview, the clinician's primary obligation remains to the client. This means the clinician is neither required to impose their own beliefs nor to personally adopt the client's. The ethical stance is one of respectful coexistence: validating the client's experience without contradiction and recognizing that moments of apparent conflict can sometimes be reframed from "either/or" to "yes, and," building on what the client offers rather than challenging it.

Central to this approach is the principle of self-determination. Clients have the inherent right to hold their own convictions, make their own choices, and define their own path, even when a clinician privately questions whether those beliefs serve the client's wellbeing. Respecting the dignity and worth of every person means honoring that right, even in the presence of strong personal disagreement. A clinician can be fully present and validating without internally abandoning their own ethical or professional perspective.

When a client's beliefs create significant internal tension for the clinician, that discomfort itself becomes clinically relevant. Supervision, professional consultation, personal mindfulness practice, or even the clinician's own therapy may be appropriate avenues for processing those reactions. The goal is to ensure that unresolved personal conflicts do not interfere with the quality of care the client receives.

 

This Ask the Expert is an edited excerpt from the course, 'Ethics Beyond Professional Codes: Wisdom from Buddhist Traditions for Behavioral Health Professionals,' presented by Allan Barsky, JD, MSW, PhD.

 


allan barsky

Allan Barsky, JD, MSW, PhD

Dr. Allan Barsky is a professor of social work at Florida Atlantic University where he was awarded “Scholar of the Year” in 2020. He is a former chair of the National Ethics Committee of the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) and was awarded NASW’s “Excellent in Ethics Award.” In 2024, he received the “Florida Atlantic University Alumni Award for Impact in Teaching” and the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts “Research Award.” Dr. Barsky’s book credits include “Ethics and Values in Social Work,” “Conflict Resolution for the Helping Professions,” “Clinicians in Court” and “Essential Ethics for Social Work Practice.”


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