Sexual Boundary Violations
Cross-source consensus on Sexual Boundary Violations from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Other
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- Sexual boundary violations are defined broadly to encompass any behaviour that transgresses someone's personal sexual boundaries, including sexual remarks, inappropriate touching, and exploitation of power imbalances. — Sexuality and sexual boundary violations in healthcare organisations: a qualitative focus group study in mental health and disability care in the Netherlands
- Dutch national legislation explicitly prohibits intimate contact between a healthcare professional and a client, and violations can trigger inspectorate or criminal investigations. — Sexuality and sexual boundary violations in healthcare organisations: a qualitative focus group study in mental health and disability care in the Netherlands
- The study identified 14 distinct situations across four organisational levels at which sexuality and SBV arise as inherently relational phenomena. — Sexuality and sexual boundary violations in healthcare organisations: a qualitative focus group study in mental health and disability care in the Netherlands
- Intimate contact between a healthcare professional and a client is explicitly characterised as sexual violence in Dutch legislation. — Sexuality and sexual boundary violations in healthcare organisations: a qualitative focus group study in mental health and disability care in the Netherlands
- A client's mental health diagnosis may cause professionals or managers to discount a report of transgressive behaviour, a form of diagnostic stigma. — Sexuality and sexual boundary violations in healthcare organisations: a qualitative focus group study in mental health and disability care in the Netherlands
- When the same rumours about a professional recur with a new group of clients, this pattern itself signals a likely ongoing problem rather than isolated incidents. — Sexuality and sexual boundary violations in healthcare organisations: a qualitative focus group study in mental health and disability care in the Netherlands