MainerMikeBrown
03-18-2018, 11:50 AM
In this day and age, the stigma against mental illness isn't as bad as it used to be, I think.
But since the stigma still exists, their are lots of laws and rules that mental health professionals are required to abide by when it comes to keeping their patients mental health issues confidential.
And in Maine, United States, one law is that if a mental health professional sees one of his or her clients/patients walking around in public, such as at a grocery store, for example, he or she cannot come up to that person and say "Hi" to them. If they were allowed to do so and others saw this, they might suspect that the person works with the mental health professional.
So if you are out and about and you see your therapist in public and that counselor doesn't say "Hi" to you, he or she probably isn't being rude to you. Instead, they're just following the laws and rules of being a mental health professional.
But since the stigma still exists, their are lots of laws and rules that mental health professionals are required to abide by when it comes to keeping their patients mental health issues confidential.
And in Maine, United States, one law is that if a mental health professional sees one of his or her clients/patients walking around in public, such as at a grocery store, for example, he or she cannot come up to that person and say "Hi" to them. If they were allowed to do so and others saw this, they might suspect that the person works with the mental health professional.
So if you are out and about and you see your therapist in public and that counselor doesn't say "Hi" to you, he or she probably isn't being rude to you. Instead, they're just following the laws and rules of being a mental health professional.