For more than forty years, Dayna Guido has sat across from clinicians in supervision, helping them navigate the gray areas of mental health practice: What do you do when a client discloses something outside the session? How do you manage the competing needs of confidentiality and safety? How do you know when your own reactions are clouding your judgment?
Now, she says, a new layer has complicated every one of those questions: Artificial Intelligence(AI).
“Supervision is where ethics becomes real,” Guido explains. “It’s the space where clinicians learn how to apply abstract codes to living situations. With AI, those situations have multiplied in ways we never anticipated.”
Read full article in Financial Tech Times.