Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 April 2021
The attractions of psychiatric mishaps are similar for the journalist and the lawyer - the perverse magnetism of sex and violence. A therapist engages in sex with his female patient; he fails to prevent a patient's suicide; or he releases a patient who then kills a third person. These are the themes of popular journalism, and of current highly publicized litigation involving psychotherapists. In this issue of Law, Medicine& Health Care, two articles look at the liability of the therapist. Michael D. Roth and Laurie J. Levin in Dilemma of Tarasoff: Must Physiciains Protect the Public or Their Patients? offer a careful look at the potential liability of the therapist, concerning the duty to warn others of a patient's threats, in light of the leading cases. The authors outline the parameters of the law, fuzzy as its current boundaries may be, in a useful attempt to offer the psychotherapist guidance through the minefield of tort liability. Sheila Taub, in a broader look at the subject, searches for threads which might link and rationalize the case-law in these hot areas, particularly with regard to abuse of the therapeutic relationship.