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Decoding the Ethics Code
Standards on
Advertising and
Other Public Statements
5. Advertising and Other Public Statements
5.01 Avoidance of False or Deceptive Statements
(a) Public statements include but are not limited to paid or unpaid advertising, product endorsements,
grant applications, licensing applications, other credentialing applications, brochures,
printed matter, directory listings, personal resumes or curricula vitae, or comments for use in
media such as print or electronic transmission, statements in legal proceedings, lectures and
public oral presentations, and published materials. Psychologists do not knowingly make public statements that are false, deceptive, or fraudulent concerning their research, practice, or other work activities or those of persons or organizations with which they are affiliated.
Psychologists aspire to promote accuracy, honesty, and truthfulness in the science, teaching, and practice of psychology and do not engage in subterfuge or intentional misrepresentation of fact (Principle C: Integrity). Standard 5.01a of the
APA Ethics Code (APA, 2010c) prohibits false, deceptive, or fraudulent public statements regarding work activities or the activities of persons or organizations with which psychologists are affiliated.
The terms avoidance and knowingly exclude as violations statements that psychologists
would reasonably be expected to believe are true but that they may later learn are false.
? A psychologist in a group practice distributed brochures with a listing of the group
members’ credentials, only to discover that one member had submitted false credentials.
She ceased distribution and ordered a corrected brochure.
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Chapter 8 Standards on Advertising and Other Public Statements——163
Definition of Public Statements
This standard begins with a definition of public statements. This definition
applies to the use of the term public statement or statement in all standards under
Section 5, Advertising and Other Public Statements. The definition refers only to
statements made in the public domain. It does not apply to statements made during
private professional or personal conversations with clients/patients, organizational
clients, attorneys, students, colleagues, or others with whom psychologists have a
professional or personal relationship.
Decoding the Ethics Code
The following are the types of statements included in this definition along
with examples of false or deceptive statements that would be in violation of this
standard:
? Paid or unpaid advertising or product endorsements. A toy company paid a
school psychologist for her endorsement stating the proven effectiveness of a taperecorded
language lesson for infants that would improve reading comprehension in
elementary school. There was no empirical evidence supporting this claim.
? Licensing, grant applications, and other credentialing applications. In the
Preliminary Studies section of a federal grant application, an experimental psychologist
listed as completed a pilot study that was still in the data collection phase.
? Directory listings, personal resumes, or curricula vitae. A psychologist with a
Ph.D. in social psychology and no specialized clinical or other practice-oriented postdoctoral
training listed himself in the city directory under health care providers.
? Business cards. A clinical neuropsychologist set up a practice in which she prescribed
psychotropic medications through her license as a nurse practitioner. Her business
cards only included her degree and title as a neuropsychologist, but listed both her
psychology and nursing state licensure numbers.
? Comments for use in print, electronic, or other media. In a television interview,
a psychology professor who had an academic freedom suit against his university
claimed that the university refused to allow any faculty to teach courses that
include discussion of human sexuality when in fact the university catalog listed
several such courses.
? Statements in legal proceedings, lectures, public oral presentations, and
published materials. An industrial–organizational psychologist was hired as an
? A research psychologist gave a public lecture, a series of media interviews, and congressional
testimony during which he publicly concluded that empirical evidence
supported a particular policy initiative. Six months later, the release of results from a
large federally funded study challenged those conclusions.
? A clinical psychologist, whose professional website included links to online listings of
national and local mental health informational services, vetted the accuracy of the
information on each listed website before the initial listing, and periodically thereafter.
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164——PART II ENFORCEABLE STANDARDS
(b) Psychologists do not make false, deceptive, or fraudulent statements concerning (1) their training,
experience, or competence; (2) their academic degrees; (3) their credentials; (4) their institutional
or association affiliations; (5) their services; (6) the scientific or clinical basis for, or results
or degree of success of, their services; (7) their fees; or (8) their publications or research findings.
In contrast to Standard 5.01a, 5.01b does not include the term knowingly
because it is assumed that psychologists would have sufficient information about
the facts listed to avoid false, deceptive, or fraudulent statements.
The following are examples of violations of the eight types of statements listed
under Standard expert witness by an attorney for a large retailing firm accused of discriminatory hiring practices. She testified that data on the firm’s hiring of women and ethnic minority applicants were not significantly different from national data on employment practices in similar companies, despite the fact that she had not examined any of the firm’s actual employment data. See the Hot Topic at the end of this chapter on “Avoiding False and Deceptive Statements in Scientific and Clinical Expert Testimony.”
Decoding the Ethics Code
HMO
? Training, experience, or competence. On a professional liability insurance application,
a psychologist stated that she had obtained substance abuse certification from
the APA College of Professional Psychology when in fact she only attended a workshop
on substance abuse treatment at an APA meeting.
? Degree. A health psychologist applying to the ABPP for diplomat status in behavioral
psychology falsely claimed he had received his doctorate in clinical psychology.
? Credentials. On his business cards, a clinical psychologist with formal postdoctoral
training in neuropsychology listed herself as a “licensed clinical neuropsychologist”
when her state only issues licenses in psychology (see Meharg & Bush, 2010).
? Institutional or association affiliations. A psychologist in independent practice
who rented office space from a university created a letterhead on his stationery that
suggested he was affiliated with the institution.
? Services. A psychology group practice website listed family therapy as one of the
services offered, even though the only psychologist offering this service had left the
group more than a year ago.
? Scientific or clinical basis for, or results or degree of success of, their services.
A behavioral psychologist running a weight loss program for obese adolescents
stated in the program brochure that “99% of clients maintain their weight
loss after they leave the program.” The statement did not include the fact that for
most of these clients, the maintenance of weight loss lasted for less than 3 weeks.
? Brochures and printed matter. A consulting psychologist distributed brochures to
personnel departments of banks in major cities stating that he had developed a foolproof
psychological technique for preemployment integrity screening to weed out
applicants who were prone to dishonesty. The claim was based on undocumented
consultations conducted by the psychologist over several years.
? Fees. A child clinical psychologist presented a talk on childhood disorders at a parents’
association meeting. After the talk, she handed out printed information about
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Chapter 8 Standards on Advertising and Other Public Statements——165
Comparative statements regarding the desirability of one type of service over
another are not prohibited if there is substantial evidence to support the claim
(Shead & Dobson, 2004; Standard 2.04, Bases for Scientific and Professional
Judgments).
Deceptive Web-Based Services
Potentially deceptive web-based advertisements and claims regarding Internetbased
mental health services risk violating Standard 5.01b. In their survey of
e-therapy websites, Heinlen et al. (2003) found substantial gaps in ethical compliance,
including (a) failure to inform consumers that the psychologist’s license to
provide mental health services online might be restricted by state law, (b) unsupported
statements disparaging face-to-face therapies in comparison to online
services, (c) descriptions of psycho-educational web-based services that could lead
consumers to believe that they would receive individualized counseling, assessment,
or therapeutic services, and (d) failure to clarify the boundaries of the psychologist’s
competence to provide services across a broad spectrum of
psychological disorders.
her practice that stated that she offered all clients a sliding scale of fees beginning at
$40 a session. The handout did not mention that the $40 rate was only for clients
specifically referred by the HMO with which the psychologist had a contract.
? Publications or research findings. A school psychologist on the faculty of a large
university received a grant from an educational services company. The purpose of the
funded project was to compare student academic achievement in city-administered
public schools with those run by the educational services company. Data from schools
in the eight cities studied indicated significant differences in favor of the city-run
schools in two cities, significant differences in favor of the company-run schools in two
cities, and no significant differences in the other four school districts. The psychologist
published only data from the two cities in which a positive effect of companycontracted
schools was found and suggested in the conclusion of the article that these
results could be generalized to other cities (see also Standard 3.06, Conflict of Interest).
? A psychologist developed a web-based service for parents of children with behavioral
problems at “www.parent-therapy-online.com.” Parents could pay $25 to e-mail a
specific question about how to help their child that was answered within 24 hours by
one of eight psychologists identified on the website as “child experts who will provide
therapeutic advice personalized to each request.” In actuality, the “personal” e-mail
responses provided prewritten general statements about behavioral child management
techniques. In small print at the bottom of the web page appeared the following
statement: “The information provided on this website is for educational purposes and
does not constitute treatment.”
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Decoding the Ethics Code
166——PART II ENFORCEABLE STANDARDS
(c) Psychologists claim degrees as credentials for their health services only if those degrees
(1) were earned from a regionally accredited educational institution or (2) were the basis for
psychology licensure by the state in which they practice.
Standard 5.01c applies only to psychologists who are claiming degrees or credentials
as evidence of their competence to provide health services. Unlike
Standard 5.01b, this standard is not directed at whether a psychologist actually
obtained the degree but whether the degree can be claimed as a basis for offering
therapy or diagnostic or other types of health services.
Psychologists may refer to only two types of degrees as evidence of education and
training in the field of psychology that qualifies them as a health service provider.
The first type is a degree in psychology (e.g., Ph.D., Ed.D., or Psy.D.) earned from a
regionally accredited educational institution (e.g., the Commission on Higher
Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools). The second
type of degree is from a program in a nonaccredited institution, whose curriculum
and training experiences have been approved by the state in which the psychologist
practices as qualifying him or her for eligibility for licensure in psychology.
A psychologist who claims a degree as a credential for health services that does
not meet the above criteria would be in violation of this standard:
Need to Know: Websites and
Potential Violation of Other Standards
Website advertising can place psychologists in violation of other Ethics Code standards
(Koocher & Keith-Spiegel, 2008; Nagy, 2011; Nicholson, 2011). Below are two examples of
such violations:
??A neuropsychologist posted quasi-psychological screening tools with questionable
validity and items drawn from standardized tests to “help” potential clients
evaluate whether they needed his services (Standard 9.02a & b, Use of Assessments
and Standard 9.11, Maintaining Test Security).
??A school psychologist’s professional website included information sheets on
different disorders and treatments related to learning disabilities without
appropriate citation (Standard 8.11, Plagiarism). The violation was exacerbated
when her website was listed by search engines as providing expert information for
consumers on childhood learning disorders.
? An individual licensed as a social worker in his state acquired a Ph.D. in counseling
psychology from a nonaccredited university. He was unable to obtain licensure in
psychology because the state in which he practices did not recognize his doctoral
training as a basis for licensure in psychology. His business cards and professional
letterhead included a Ph.D. after his name, the title Counseling Psychologist, and his
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Chapter 8 Standards on Advertising and Other Public Statements——167
(b) Psychologists do not compensate employees of press, radio, television, or other communication
media in return for publicity in a news item. (See also Standard 1.01, Misuse of Psychologists’
Work.)
Decoding the Ethics Code
Standard 5.02b underscores psychologists’ obligations to avoid actions that
might encourage others to make false or fraudulent statements about their work.
5.02 Statements by Others
(a) Psychologists who engage others to create or place public statements that promote their
professional practice, products, or activities retain professional responsibility for such statements.
Psychologists retain professional responsibility for false, deceptive, or fraudulent
public statements by others whom they have engaged to promote their work or
products. Failure to prevent or to correct such misstatements is a violation of
Standard 5.02.
? A psychologist viewed the website of the company that was publishing a book she
had just completed. She was surprised and pleased to see the company had started
advertising the book as “forthcoming.” She then noticed that she was wrongly listed
on the website as professor of psychology at a university where she had taught as an
adjunct several years ago. She called her editor at the company to notify him of the
error and to ask him to take steps to correct the website. She followed up with a letter
to him reiterating this request and copied the chair of the psychology department at
the university mentioned.
? A psychologist developed a program that enabled other psychologists to score a
popular psychological test on their computers. The psychologist had not yet completed
complementary software that would provide narrative interpretations of the
scores. The marketing staff at the distribution company he contracted with to sell
his product advised him that the scoring software would sell better if it was advertised
as providing both scoring and interpretation. They argued that even though
this was not currently true, because he was already working on the new program,
eventually those who bought the original software would be able to use the complementary
software for narrative interpretations. The psychologist agreed to the
misleading advertisement.
social work licensure ID number. The letterhead did not indicate that his license was
in social work and not psychology.
? On her personnel curriculum vitae, a psychologist claimed that she had received her
Ph.D. from an accredited university, when her actual degree was from an unaccredited
school to which she had transferred.
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168——PART II ENFORCEABLE STANDARDS
This standard prohibits psychologists from paying or otherwise compensating
members of the media in return for news coverage of their work. The use of the
term compensate rather than pay means that psychologists who give nonmonetary
gifts or pay for expensive dinners for journalists or others in the media in return for
publicity in a news item may be considered in violation of this standard.
(c) A paid advertisement relating to psychologists’ activities must be identified or clearly recognizable
as such.
Standard 5.02c permits psychologists to run paid advertisements describing
their services, publications, products, or other aspects of their work, as long as it
is stated or otherwise clear to consumers that it is a paid advertisement. The standard
applies to advertisements on the Internet, in print, or in other media.
“Canned columns” are an example of a paid advertisement that often is presented
in a way that can be deceptive to consumers. Canned columns written and paid
for by psychologists are typically presented in news or advice column format
intended to mislead readers to believe that the psychologist has been invited or
hired by the magazine or other media outlet to write the column because of his
or her expertise. The “column” usually includes a description of the psychologist’s
services, the psychologist’s picture, and contact information. Canned columns
that do not include a clear statement that the column is a “paid advertisement”
are in violation of this standard. In some instances, psychologists do not write the
column themselves but purchase it from a writer who sells columns to psychologists
nationwide. In such instances, the column must state that the psychologist
is providing but has not written the column (see also Standard 5.01a, Avoidance
of False or Deceptive Statements).
5.03 Descriptions of Workshops and
Non-Degree-Granting Educational Programs
To the degree to which they exercise control, psychologists responsible for announcements, catalogs, brochures, or advertisements describing workshops, seminars, or other nondegree-granting educational programs ensure that they accurately describe the audience for which the program is intended, the educational objectives, the presenters, and the fees involved.