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President’s Corner – Dr. John Santa, Ph.D.
November 2005
A New Professionalism, Collegiality, Competition, and Marketing
In the last President’s corner I talked about the rapid growth
we have experienced in residential treatment. I tried to make
the case that the growth has resulted from a real need and a
failure of other professions to take care of youngsters who are
immature, lack containment, and need an out of home placement.
In the past eight years NATSAP has helped nurture a new
profession based on the intervention and care for these
immature, emotionally or behaviorally disturbed children and
their families. This new profession goes beyond our educational
backgrounds. We are more than psychologists, teachers, social
workers, or outdoor educators in our residential settings, and
we are developing a knowledge that begins to create the basis of
a new profession.
As knowledge accumulates, NATSAP has created opportunities to
share this information by hosting study groups to define ethical
approaches and best practice standards. We have sponsored
national and regional conferences to build opportunities for
sharing information and exchanging ideas. We have now launched a
professional journal with the inaugural edition due in January
of 2006, aimed at collecting and codifying the growing
information we have gathered about effective treatment. The open
collaboration and generous sharing of information is beginning
to define our new profession.
Those of us who experience emotional growth programs of twenty
years ago will note several substantial differences. The early
approaches were truly alternative and charismatic in nature as
opposed to professional. Each program was unique and depended
heavily on the intuitions, guidance, and often the genius of the
founder. Programs could best be described as islands of
information with little communication and much distrust and
secrecy among the different programs. In many ways the early
programs, while creative and entrepreneurial in nature, were
both anti-professional and non-professional. They prided
themselves in providing an alternative to both medical and
standard educational approaches to working with out of control
teenagers.
The past fifteen years has seen a rapid growth of programs as
well as a shift towards a more professional and information
sharing environment. NATSAP as an organization is both the
result of the increase in professionalism among programs, and a
catalyst for fostering the development of our new profession.
As our new profession develops, we must examine what it means to
be a professional. We must also ask ourselves what are the
boundaries and edges of this new collaborative profession. Where
do we bump into the economic, and competitive forces that do not
foster collegiality and the growth of a new profession?
Several areas create a high risk for undermining our new
profession. In marketing it is often tempting to offer rumors or
limited information about other programs in order to make the
case that your program is the best answer for a particular
client. Or, we pass gossip to each other and consultants. Such
gossip at times makes us feel we are insiders, or it places us
in a superior position in the eyes of a consultant, or sometimes
we are just in a foul spirited mood and are leaking our feelings
in the hopes that this will somehow make us feel better. To be
honest, I think that Aspen programs have been the unfair target
for some of our gossip as we struggle to deal with the fear of
change, growth, and corporations entering our profession. But I
have the feeling that gossip about each other is endemic and
destructive to professionalism, trust, and collegiality.
Another way that marketing has interfered with creating a
professional community is when we have a
conference and our members pay more attention to the marketing
opportunity of having consultants available than to the
opportunity to develop relationships among our members. We must
look closely at situations in which we leave our conference in
order to entertain consultants. For example, two years ago at
the NATSAP conference we had a dinner to honor Kimball DeLaMare
as the first recipient of the award for outstanding
contributions in our field. Only a third of the members remained
for the dinner and nearly two thirds left to market. I don’t
think it means we must never look at or talk to a consultant at
our conference. Obviously, many of us have close personal
relationships with consultants. It makes perfectly good sense to
maintain friendships, but we must also make the development of
collegial relationships a priority. And we must constantly
question and examine our motives.
Staff recruiting is another obvious area in which we can undo
trust, mutual respect and the development of professionalism. At
the last NATSAP conference several of my therapists came back
quite flattered, but a little chagrined at being openly
recruited by other programs. Others have told me of having
letters sent to them directly enticing them to leave their
current program and go to a new program. Obviously, staff
poaching will create distrust and decrease collegiality. How
should recruitment be handled in a way that is open and yet
respects each other’s business? I am not sure any profession has
this problem figured out, but we must discuss it and begin to
establish agreement as to what is OK and what is not.
Finally, as a profession we have a fiduciary responsibility for
those whom we serve, and we must safeguard and care for the
emotional well being of vulnerable children and their families.
We must guard against greed, excess, corruption, and social
irresponsibility even more than Enron, or the White House.
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