General Etiquette > All In A Day's Work
Un---Believeable!
Peaches737:
This is the second (SECOND!!) time this has happened.I have a collegue that fancies himself a vidiographer. Taped last year's employee holiday party, there was a huge issue that the patients were watching it over the night shift.
(Background, I work in a Psych ward, and have had several stalkers follow me out to the parking lot after they were discharged)
Today, my pastoral counselor yanked me out by my collar (in the middle of pretty important treatment planning--we unplug the phones to concentrate on the clients)
Peaches737:
Sorry--clicked, but hadn't finished. A collegue showed a tape of the employee Holiday party to my patients.
I don't want my clients to see me in a low cut blouse and a beer in hand, other people bumping and grinding on the dance floor, and pretty much serious boundary issues.
I got upset enough that one of the gals I supervise said, "I've seen you angry over the years, I've never seen you angry enough that you were shaking"
I didn't do anything stupid, but I felt that it was a violation of my privacy.
RuneGuardian:
Any particular reason why Co-Worker felt the urge to video-tape this party? Did other people there want a video of themselves drinking and partying and what-not? Who gave it to the patients? I assume none of them were at the party?
I don't blame you for feeling a little irritated - your patients may see you differently now after seeing you in non-medical mode. Maybe not, but there's a possibility. So what has become of this video now? Is it still being watched during the night shift, or has it stopped?
Venus193:
This sounds like grounds for disciplinary action. This is egregiously unprofessional and far beyond the scope of etiquette.
ZipTheWonder:
Un-----believable, yes. In----appropriate, totally. Un----professional, absolutely.
Good grief, WHAT could he be thinking???
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