What would the waiver be for? I'd be cautious about that. If you are doing  
professional and ethical work and not going beyond the scope of your  
practice...there shouldn't be a reason to. I like the idea of having  
consultation cards...
 
I was in a class where the waiver question was asked...the educator  
responded "suppose something does go wrong with the client and she decides  to 
sue 
you...well now she has evidence that you knew there was an issue but  
decided to work on her anyway. that's even worse"
 
I hope this is the type of waiver you were referring to.
 
Alanna

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