Introduction to ABA, Ethics, & Core Principles: A Paradigm Overview

 
Introduction to ABA, Ethics,
& Core Principles
 
Brodhead, Cox, and Quigley (2018)
 
Chapter Overview
 
Brief historical context of approaches to distinguish “right” from
“wrong”
Assumptions of what is “right” conduct for behavior analysts
 
Theoretical conflicts between difference claims of what is “right” conduct for
behavior analysts
 
Applied ethics within the science of behavior analysis is far from
comprehensive and complete
 
Awareness of historical and philosophical context can guide
practitioner applications of the BACB Ethics Code (2014)
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics
 
Providing the Groundwork
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics
 
The science and practice of behavior analysis emphasizes the
importance of consequences
 
The importance of consequences for “right” behavior have been
recognized for thousands of years (Hammurabi & Johns, 2008)
 
The rules and consequences for “right” behavior are related to a host
of variables (e.g., geographical region, cultural group, context of the
act)
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics
 
A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics
 
Virtue
 
Consequentialism
 
Deontology
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Virtue Ethics
 
Virtue ethics argues that moral excellence, or virtue, is the proper
focus or reflection on ethics and rules for behavior (e.g., Hursthouse
& Pettigrove, 2016)
 
Some behaviors are ethical, “right”, or “good” in and of themselves –
regardless of the context or outcomes
 
Honesty
Patience
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Virtue Ethics
 
Individuals may be labeled as virtuous if two conditions are met:
The individual tends to emit behavior consistent with the socially agreed-
upon label (e.g., honesty)
 
The individual’s virtuous response should be fluent and maintained by non-
social reinforcement
 
Example – A behavior analyst repeatedly only reports the true type and amount of
billable hours for reimbursement through an insurance company
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics
 
A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics
 
Virtue – Moral excellence is the proper focus for rules of behavior
 
Consequentialism
 
Deontology
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Consequentialism
 
Consequentialism argues the outcomes of a behavior determine
whether that behavior is right or wrong
 
Act consequentialism – behavior is “right” or “wrong” if and only if that act
maximizes the good
 
Hedonsim – pleasure is the only “right”, and that pain / aversiveness are the
only “wrong”
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Consequentialism
 
A consequentialist paradigm suggests a behavior is ethical if:
The behavior causes “the greatest happiness for the greatest number”
 
Stated another way, the behavior maximizes the good and minimizes
the bad for all relevant parties
 
Example – maximizing the overall amount of reinforcers a client
contacts relative to the aversive experiences needed to obtain the
reinforcers. A comparison of the number of reinforcers without
intervention should also be considered.
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics
 
A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics
 
Virtue – Moral excellence is the proper focus for rules of behavior
 
Consequentialism – The outcomes of a behavior determine right or wrong
 
Deontology
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Deontology
 
Deontology define “right” and “wrong” as function of the behavior
and the context in which that behavior occurs
 
The premises of deontology are based upon highlighting weaknesses
of virtue and consequentialism
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Deontology
 
Weakness of virtue
Behaviors cannot always be “right” or “wrong”. There are contexts in which
virtuous behavior is “right”.
 
Example – Lying to your significant other about your location because you are planning a
surprise party him / her
 
 
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Deontology
 
Weaknesses of consequentialism
 
The consequences of our behavior are often out of our control
 
It places impractical demands due to having to consider all potential
outcomes, for all behavior, for all people
 
It can result in extreme permissiveness; it seems to demand innocents be
killed, beaten, etc. as it results in the greater benefit for others
 
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics – Deontology
 
Weakness of deontology
 
The norms of behavior are often decided by people who have power of some
kind (e.g., religion, government officials)
 
Post-hoc justification of behavior; contextual factors that others may not have
observed or identified are used to justify behavior
 
 
 
Paradigms of Clinical Ethics
 
A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics
 
Virtue – Moral excellence is the proper focus for rules of behavior
 
Consequentialism – The outcomes of a behavior determine right or wrong
 
Deontology – The function of behavior and the context determine right or
wrong
 
Western Clinical Codes of Ethics
 
 
Western Clinical Code of Ethics
 
Ethical paradigms can influence 
how
 you justify “right” or “wrong”
 
Ethical paradigms do not inherently state 
what
 is “right” or “wrong”
 
Formal codes of ethics guide “right” and “wrong”
 
Western Clinical Code of Ethics
 
Formal codes of clinical ethics
 
Medicine is the oldest helping profession
 
Early writings of Hippocrates and others discussed qualities of good
physicians
 
The writings also included oaths to perform duties (e.g., benefit, no harm)
 
Western Clinical Code of Ethics
 
Formal codes of clinical ethics
 
Code of Medical Ethics 
(1847)
 
Principles of Medical Ethics 
(1966)
Respecting the rights of patients
Demonstrating ongoing competency and improvement in skills
Accepting and respecting the discipline of the profession
Obtaining consultation when necessary
Maintaining client confidentiality
Being a good citizen
Practicing and accepting payment only within one’s medical competency
 
Western Clinical Code of Ethics
 
Increasing market share through codification
 
Ethical codes can increase public trust in a profession
 
A profession with public trust may have an increased market share
 
Medical practice is the dominant approach to nearly all areas of healthcare
 
Publication and adherence to the code played a role in this market share growth
 
Many other helping professions imitated medicine and created code of ethics
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Material for Building
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
Medical/clinical ethics are subfields of bioethics
 
Multiple factors led to its development
Advancement in medical technologies
Increased interaction between distinct healthcare providers
Increased focus on applied ethics
 
There was a need to establish basic ethical principles that
transcended multiple healthcare professions
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Belmont Report
 
A response to social reactions and problems that arose from the Tuskegee Syphilis
Study
 
Conducted by the United States Public Health Services from 1932 to 1972
 
About 600 men who identified as African American or Black
 
About 2/3 of the men had syphilis
 
No consent to participate, and arguably coercive conditions
 
The men were not told they had the disease, not that a treatment was available
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Belmont Report
 
There were many disturbing and unethical facets of the Tuskegee Syphilis
Study, which prompted the National Commission for the Protection of Human
Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research to establish guidelines for
conducting ethical research
 
The Belmont Report prescribed three basic principles
 
Respect for persons
Beneficence
Justice
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Belmont Report
 
Respect for persons
Beneficence
Justice
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Belmont Report
 
Respect for persons
Treat the individual as an independently functioning individual with a right to autonomy
Each individual (or caregiver) is the most appropriate person to determine what does or does
not happen to his / her body
 
Individuals with diminished autonomy are entitled to protection
Autonomy can be present in varying degrees
A proxy decision-maker that makes decisions that maximize benefits and minimize harms
 
Beneficence
Justice
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Belmont Report
 
Respect for persons
Beneficence
Healthcare practitioners improve the well-being of others
Do no harm or 
primum non nocere
Maximize benefits while minimizing harm
 
Justice
 
Principles of Bioethics
 
The Belmont Report
 
Respect for persons
Beneficence
Justice
Benefits and costs of healthcare as a resources should be fairly or justly distributed
Practical decisions have to be made regarding the benefits and costs of health care
 
ABA & Ethics
 
What We Have Built So Far
 
ABA & Ethics
 
The BACB Professional and Ethical Compliance Code (2014) is evolved
from virtue theory, consequentialism, and deontology
 
The Code utilizes the guiding principles of respect for persons,
beneficence, and justice
 
Combining multiple paradigms and principles into a cohesive
document may complicate ethical decision-making
 
ABA & Ethics
 
Virtue theory influences
Consequentialism influences
Deontology influences
 
ABA & Ethics
 
Virtue theory influences
Code 1.04 regarding truth and honest; being honest is “good”
Other examples are 1.01, 2.13, and 9.02
 
Consequentialism influences
Deontology influences
 
ABA & Ethics
 
Virtue theory influences
Consequentialism influences
Code 2.09 regarding use of “most-effective” treatments with “both long-term
and short-term benefits”
Other examples include 2.03 and 4.08
 
Deontology influences
 
ABA & Ethics
 
Virtue theory influences
Consequentialism influences
Deontology influences
Code 1.05 regarding behaviors a BCBA would emit in the context of
professional scientific relationships
Other examples in include 2.14, 2.15, 4.02, and 4.09
 
ABA & Ethics
 
Consequences of influences from multiple ethical paradigms
Can create flexibility in applying and justifying behavior
 
Can result in confusion and variability when the justified ethical behaviors are
not explicitly covered by the Code
 
Claims to what is “right” and “wrong”, justified by one paradigm, may
contradict claims of “right” and “wrong” from other paradigms
 
Two Codes might directly conflict and each is justified by different paradigms
 
ABA & Ethical Theory
 
Why BCBAs Should Care
 
ABA & Ethical Theory
 
The history of ethical paradigms and the difficulties created are
important for two reasons
 
Analysis of ethical behavior should occur on a daily basis as behavior analysts
emit behavior on a daily basis that fits within the Code. There is a need to
justify this behavior.
 
The field of behavior analysis will benefit from BCBAs understanding how
ethical paradigms inform the Code.
 
If one paradigm increases appropriate behavior and better services, the paradigm should
be emphasized
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This chapter provides a historical context of approaches to ethical behavior in behavior analysis. It discusses theoretical conflicts, the importance of consequences, and reviews dominant paradigms in clinical ethics such as virtue ethics, consequentialism, and deontology. It explores the concept of moral excellence and how individuals can be labeled as virtuous based on their consistent and reinforced ethical behaviors.


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  1. Introduction to ABA, Ethics, & Core Principles Brodhead, Cox, and Quigley (2018)

  2. Chapter Overview Brief historical context of approaches to distinguish right from wrong Assumptions of what is right conduct for behavior analysts Theoretical conflicts between difference claims of what is right conduct for behavior analysts Applied ethics within the science of behavior analysis is far from comprehensive and complete Awareness of historical and philosophical context can guide practitioner applications of the BACB Ethics Code (2014)

  3. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Providing the Groundwork

  4. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics The science and practice of behavior analysis emphasizes the importance of consequences The importance of consequences for right behavior have been recognized for thousands of years (Hammurabi & Johns, 2008) The rules and consequences for right behavior are related to a host of variables (e.g., geographical region, cultural group, context of the act)

  5. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics Virtue Consequentialism Deontology

  6. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Virtue Ethics Virtue ethics argues that moral excellence, or virtue, is the proper focus or reflection on ethics and rules for behavior (e.g., Hursthouse & Pettigrove, 2016) Some behaviors are ethical, right , or good in and of themselves regardless of the context or outcomes Honesty Patience

  7. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Virtue Ethics Individuals may be labeled as virtuous if two conditions are met: The individual tends to emit behavior consistent with the socially agreed- upon label (e.g., honesty) The individual s virtuous response should be fluent and maintained by non- social reinforcement Example A behavior analyst repeatedly only reports the true type and amount of billable hours for reimbursement through an insurance company

  8. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics Virtue Moral excellence is the proper focus for rules of behavior Consequentialism Deontology

  9. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Consequentialism Consequentialism argues the outcomes of a behavior determine whether that behavior is right or wrong Act consequentialism behavior is right or wrong if and only if that act maximizes the good Hedonsim pleasure is the only right , and that pain / aversiveness are the only wrong

  10. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Consequentialism A consequentialist paradigm suggests a behavior is ethical if: The behavior causes the greatest happiness for the greatest number Stated another way, the behavior maximizes the good and minimizes the bad for all relevant parties Example maximizing the overall amount of reinforcers a client contacts relative to the aversive experiences needed to obtain the reinforcers. A comparison of the number of reinforcers without intervention should also be considered.

  11. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics Virtue Moral excellence is the proper focus for rules of behavior Consequentialism The outcomes of a behavior determine right or wrong Deontology

  12. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Deontology Deontology define right and wrong as function of the behavior and the context in which that behavior occurs The premises of deontology are based upon highlighting weaknesses of virtue and consequentialism

  13. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Deontology Weakness of virtue Behaviors cannot always be right or wrong . There are contexts in which virtuous behavior is right . Example Lying to your significant other about your location because you are planning a surprise party him / her

  14. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Deontology Weaknesses of consequentialism The consequences of our behavior are often out of our control It places impractical demands due to having to consider all potential outcomes, for all behavior, for all people It can result in extreme permissiveness; it seems to demand innocents be killed, beaten, etc. as it results in the greater benefit for others

  15. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics Deontology Weakness of deontology The norms of behavior are often decided by people who have power of some kind (e.g., religion, government officials) Post-hoc justification of behavior; contextual factors that others may not have observed or identified are used to justify behavior

  16. Paradigms of Clinical Ethics A brief review of dominant paradigms in clinical ethics Virtue Moral excellence is the proper focus for rules of behavior Consequentialism The outcomes of a behavior determine right or wrong Deontology The function of behavior and the context determine right or wrong

  17. Western Clinical Codes of Ethics

  18. Western Clinical Code of Ethics Ethical paradigms can influence how you justify right or wrong Ethical paradigms do not inherently state what is right or wrong Formal codes of ethics guide right and wrong

  19. Western Clinical Code of Ethics Formal codes of clinical ethics Medicine is the oldest helping profession Early writings of Hippocrates and others discussed qualities of good physicians The writings also included oaths to perform duties (e.g., benefit, no harm)

  20. Western Clinical Code of Ethics Formal codes of clinical ethics Code of Medical Ethics (1847) Principles of Medical Ethics (1966) Respecting the rights of patients Demonstrating ongoing competency and improvement in skills Accepting and respecting the discipline of the profession Obtaining consultation when necessary Maintaining client confidentiality Being a good citizen Practicing and accepting payment only within one s medical competency

  21. Western Clinical Code of Ethics Increasing market share through codification Ethical codes can increase public trust in a profession A profession with public trust may have an increased market share Medical practice is the dominant approach to nearly all areas of healthcare Publication and adherence to the code played a role in this market share growth Many other helping professions imitated medicine and created code of ethics

  22. Principles of Bioethics The Material for Building

  23. Principles of Bioethics Medical/clinical ethics are subfields of bioethics Multiple factors led to its development Advancement in medical technologies Increased interaction between distinct healthcare providers Increased focus on applied ethics There was a need to establish basic ethical principles that transcended multiple healthcare professions

  24. Principles of Bioethics The Belmont Report A response to social reactions and problems that arose from the Tuskegee Syphilis Study Conducted by the United States Public Health Services from 1932 to 1972 About 600 men who identified as African American or Black About 2/3 of the men had syphilis No consent to participate, and arguably coercive conditions The men were not told they had the disease, not that a treatment was available

  25. Principles of Bioethics The Belmont Report There were many disturbing and unethical facets of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, which prompted the National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research to establish guidelines for conducting ethical research The Belmont Report prescribed three basic principles Respect for persons Beneficence Justice

  26. Principles of Bioethics The Belmont Report Respect for persons Beneficence Justice

  27. Principles of Bioethics The Belmont Report Respect for persons Treat the individual as an independently functioning individual with a right to autonomy Each individual (or caregiver) is the most appropriate person to determine what does or does not happen to his / her body Individuals with diminished autonomy are entitled to protection Autonomy can be present in varying degrees A proxy decision-maker that makes decisions that maximize benefits and minimize harms Beneficence Justice

  28. Principles of Bioethics The Belmont Report Respect for persons Beneficence Healthcare practitioners improve the well-being of others Do no harm or primum non nocere Maximize benefits while minimizing harm Justice

  29. Principles of Bioethics The Belmont Report Respect for persons Beneficence Justice Benefits and costs of healthcare as a resources should be fairly or justly distributed Practical decisions have to be made regarding the benefits and costs of health care

  30. ABA & Ethics What We Have Built So Far

  31. ABA & Ethics The BACB Professional and Ethical Compliance Code (2014) is evolved from virtue theory, consequentialism, and deontology The Code utilizes the guiding principles of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice Combining multiple paradigms and principles into a cohesive document may complicate ethical decision-making

  32. ABA & Ethics Virtue theory influences Consequentialism influences Deontology influences

  33. ABA & Ethics Virtue theory influences Code 1.04 regarding truth and honest; being honest is good Other examples are 1.01, 2.13, and 9.02 Consequentialism influences Deontology influences

  34. ABA & Ethics Virtue theory influences Consequentialism influences Code 2.09 regarding use of most-effective treatments with both long-term and short-term benefits Other examples include 2.03 and 4.08 Deontology influences

  35. ABA & Ethics Virtue theory influences Consequentialism influences Deontology influences Code 1.05 regarding behaviors a BCBA would emit in the context of professional scientific relationships Other examples in include 2.14, 2.15, 4.02, and 4.09

  36. ABA & Ethics Consequences of influences from multiple ethical paradigms Can create flexibility in applying and justifying behavior Can result in confusion and variability when the justified ethical behaviors are not explicitly covered by the Code Claims to what is right and wrong , justified by one paradigm, may contradict claims of right and wrong from other paradigms Two Codes might directly conflict and each is justified by different paradigms

  37. ABA & Ethical Theory Why BCBAs Should Care

  38. ABA & Ethical Theory The history of ethical paradigms and the difficulties created are important for two reasons Analysis of ethical behavior should occur on a daily basis as behavior analysts emit behavior on a daily basis that fits within the Code. There is a need to justify this behavior. The field of behavior analysis will benefit from BCBAs understanding how ethical paradigms inform the Code. If one paradigm increases appropriate behavior and better services, the paradigm should be emphasized

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