OPINION
Kevin Ross and Jane Ross (now Jordan) appeal the termination of their parental rights over their four children. They raise one issue for review which we restate as:
Whether the psychologist-patient privilege applies in a procеeding to terminate parental rights.
We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On August 16, 1991, the Delaware County Department of Public Welfare (Department) filed a petition alleging that the parents’ four children were children in need of services (CHINS). 1 The Department alleged that when found alone in their home by the police, the children and their clothes were extremely dirty, the home was unsanitary, there was no fоod, and the youngest child had a severe burn on his back and a knot on his forehead. On October 13,1991, the parents admitted to the Department’s allegations and the trial *1270 court entered an order adjudicating the children as CHINS.
Immediately following the CHINS determination, the court held a dispositional hearing and entered an order. As part of the plan for the treatment and rehabilitation of the children, the court ordered the parents to submit to psychological evaluations. On November 6, 1992, the Department filed petitions for the involuntary termination of the parent/child relationship for all four -of the Ross’s children.
During the termination hearing, the court heard testimony from Dr. Scott Strader, the psychologist who interviewed and evaluated Kevin Ross. Dr. Strader administered several tests: the Weschler Adult Intelligence Test (Weschler), the Rorschach Ink Blot Test (Rorschach), and the Mallion Clinical Axel Inventory Test (Mallion). The Wеs-chler test results revealed that Kevin had an IQ of seventy-one, which signifies borderline intellectual functioning. 2 Based on the Rоrschach test, Dr. Strader determined that Kevin had low self-esteem and self-confidence. Based on the Mallion test, Dr. Strader found that Kevin had trouble expressing his emotions, was impulsive, and was prone to depression.
After conducting the tests, Dr. Strader concluded that Kevin could function under routine circumstances such as going to work everyday. Dr. Strader further concludеd, however, that Kevin would experience great difficulty when faced with something other than a routine activity, i.e., raising children and maintaining a stable relationship.
The court also heard testimony from Dr. Stanley Wenck, the psychologist who examinеd Jane. Dr. Wenck also administered several tests: the Weschler test, an achievement test, several personality tеsts including the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, and the Rotter Incomplete Sentence Blank Test. Based on those examinations, Dr. Wenck found that Jane had an IQ of seventy-six, was mildly mentally handicapped, suffered from depression, and wаs genetically at risk for substance abuse. Dr. Wenck concluded that termination of her parental rights be considered, givеn her low IQ and personality weaknesses.
On February 22, 1995, the court terminated Kevin and Jane’s parental rights. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Kevin and Jane assert the trial court erred in admitting the testimony of the psychologists, Dr. Strader and Dr. Wenck, in the termination hearings. They claim any information or test results from their meetings with the psychologists were privileged. We disagree.
In
Shaw v. Shelby County Dep’t of Pub. Welfare,
Our suprеme court reasoned that although termination hearings are separate from CHINS proceedings, termination hearings adopted the same procedures as the CHINS proceedings.
Shaw,
Recently, this court in
Stone v. Daviess County Div. of Children and Family Serv.,
Here, Kevin and Jane, like the appellants in the previous cases, assert that any information arising from their meetings with Dr. Strader and Dr. Wenck are protected under the psychologist-patiеnt privilege in IC 25-33-1-17. However, like the privilege in Stone, a statutory exception also exists for the psychologist-patient privilege when abrogated under Indiana law. See IC 25-33-1-17(6).
Applying
Shaw
and
Stone
to the present ease, we come to the same conclusion: the psychologist-patient privilege is abrogated under Indiana law. and, therefore, is not available in termination procеedings. Our holding is a logical extension of
Shaw,
which abolished the physician-patient privilege in termination proceedings, аnd
Stone,
which extended the rule of
Shaw
to abolish the privilege between social workers and clients. We find no reason why the psychologist-patient privilege should be afforded any more protection than the privileges found to be abrogated in
Shaw
and
Stone. See Stone,
Affirmed.
Notes
. See IC 31-6-4-3(a).
. Dr. Strader testified that an average IQ was 100, with the ranges usually between 80 and 120.
. IC 25-23.6-6-1(8) provides an exception to the social worker-patient privilege in cases where such privilege was "abrogated under Indiana law.”
