CODE OF ETHICS

Duties of the wellness practitioner towards the consultant


ARTICLE 1 – EXERCISE

# The well-being practitioner authorizes himself to exercise a therapeutic approach based on his theoretical and practical learning, the tools acquired during his training and his personal experiences while respecting the fundamental rights of the person who consults him (dignity , freedom, protection, etc.).
# It prohibits any diagnosis or interventionism vis-à-vis the medical profession or medical treatments in progress.
# It refrains from any religious or political orientation or interventionism.
# He will have to welcome in consultation and provide his advice to any person wishing help, without discrimination. However, the well-being practitioner reserves the right to refuse a person or to stop a follow-up if his physical, ethical, deontological integrity is at stake.


ARTICLE 2 – OBLIGATION OF MEANS

#Depending on the consultant’s request, the well-being practitioner will implement all the means at his disposal and which will allow him to achieve his objective: either try to best meet the consultant’s request.
It will promote the well-being of the consultant, including by having recourse to a health professional, if necessary.
#The wellness practitioner cannot do beyond the means: tools acquired during his training and experience.
#He may assume the right of reservation if the consultant’s request goes beyond his prerogatives and functions.
#The well-being practitioner undertakes to keep himself informed of any changes in his framework of practice. It is also committed to continuous training in order to optimize its care service.
#The wellness practitioner undertakes to inform the consultant in complete transparency as to the consequences of the latter’s decision. He must therefore inform the consultant of the possible consequences of any protocol put in place.
#He will also inform the consultant of the consequences of a refusal of treatment and will release him from liability for the consequences of this refusal.

 

ARTICLE 3 – RESPECT, HUMILITY, ECOLOGY OF CARE

#The therapeutic axis of the wellness practitioner is based on the potential of each consultant.
#His mission is to help him find the means of his own healing or access to well-being.
#His role will be to listen to the consultant and adapt his advice according to the beliefs, means and possibilities of the latter.
#He undertakes to respect the will of the consultant. He will provide the free and informed consent of each consultant or of the person responsible for the consultant (minors, situation of disability, curatorship, etc.). The wellness practitioner is prohibited from exercising any abuse of influence on his consultant (seduction, financial or sexual abuse, religious, political or sectarian manipulation, etc.).
#He will respect the values, beliefs, identity and financial means of each consultant.
#He will also take care to respect the healing rate of each consultant as well as his physical, mental, emotional, material and financial means and limits.
#He will make sure to keep an emotional distance so as not to fuel a pattern of addiction.


ARTICLE 4 – AUTONOMY OF THE CONSULTANT

#The well-being practitioner, through his professional and benevolent attitude, will guide the consultant towards an autonomy of well-being.
#He will make available to the consultant, all the therapeutic tools he has (in respect of the consultant) aimed at empowering the latter in his healing process. He will therefore ensure, in this context, continuity of care, with respect for the consultant.


ARTICLE 5 – CONFIDENTIALITY

#The wellness practitioner is bound by professional secrecy.
#However, he may share information only if it is not personal and only for the purpose of making known new therapeutic avenues or seeking advice or advice from his peers or other therapists.
#He may also share this non-personal information in the context of supervision or writing articles with the agreement of the consultant.

Duties of the practitioner of well-being towards himself and his peers


ARTICLE 1 – PERSONAL CONSISTENCY

#The wellness practitioner will take care to respect their own needs, respecting their values, beliefs and identity.
#He will be vigilant about his limits, and will not hesitate to respect them.
#He will make sure to take into account his limits and beliefs in the exercise of his work and in the interest of his consultants.
#It prohibits slander, slander, sycophancy, conflict of interest.
#He does not communicate the content of the training he has taken for profit. He will take care not to plagiarize them either.
#He keeps himself informed of news and novelties with the aim of personal growth and optimization of care.


ARTICLE 2 – DUTY OF CONSCIOUSNESS, TRANSPARENCY AND OPEN-MINDED

#Wellness Practitioner Agrees to Face It sown problems and personal tensions, taking care not to transfer them to the consultant.
#He must demonstrate objectivity and impartiality.
#The wellness practitioner will have to demonstrate an attitude of relational transparency and will refuse any dogmatism.
#He will always have to question his own experience and practice for the purpose of personal development and to best serve the interest of the consultants.


ARTICLE 3 – NON-COMPETITION

#The wellness practitioner refrains from any unfair competition with his peers.
#Also, he is free to set his prices but with respect for his peers. He is also free of charge for his care.
#He refrains from any slander, conflict of interest, manipulation aimed at diverting the consultant from his peers.