Foundations of Mental Health Flashcards

Review the nurse-client relationship, therapeutic communication, defense mechanisms, and types of therapy.

1
Q

How should clients be treated?

A

With R-E-S-P-E-C-T.

  • be considerate of cultural, spiritual and religious beliefs
  • use appropriate limits and boundaries
  • use therapeutic communication
  • be nonjudgmental
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2
Q

When will a mental health client be discharged?

A

When the HCP has deemed that the client is safe.

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3
Q

What is the goal of the nurse-client relationship?

A

To assist client with problem-solving and coping skills to help make them well.

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4
Q

What are the 4 phases of a nurse-client relationship?

A
  1. pre-interaction phase
  2. orientation or introductory phase
  3. working phase
  4. termination or separation phase
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5
Q

What is the pre-interaction phase?

A

What occurs before the nurse meets with the client. The nurse:

  • gets a comfortable environment set up before the client arrives
  • anticipates problems the client may be dealing with
  • determines how to approach the client
  • self reflects on own biases that could affect relationship
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6
Q

What is the orientation or introductory phase?

A

When the nurse first meets the client:

  • establishes trust and boundaries
  • identifies strengths and needs
  • collects data and makes goals or a contract with client
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7
Q

What is the working phase?

A

When the nurse is actively working with the client:

  • active listening, so client can express thoughts and feelings
  • encourages self-direction
  • work on goal-solving
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8
Q

What is the termination or separation phase?

A

When the relationship ends:

  • prepares for separation and feelings
  • evaluates goals and progress
  • anticipates follow up care
  • makes referrals for support groups
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9
Q

What role do family members play in a client’s care?

A

Active members in the care of the client.

Include family when possible.

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10
Q

What is a mental health problem?

A

When the client has thoughts or behavior that impair normal life functioning and causes distress.

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11
Q

What are defense mechanisms?

A

What a client uses to cope with unmanageable stress and to decrease anxiety.

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12
Q

What is denial?

A

A defense mechanism when the client ignores the unpleasant or intolerable thoughts, feelings, needs or impulses.

Example: a husband ignores his wife’s infidelity even though there are obvious signs.

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13
Q

What is displacement?

A

A defense mechanism when the client directs their feelings to another less-threatening person or object.

Example: an angry client hits the wall instead of a person.

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14
Q

What is projection?

A

A defense mechanism when the client transfers their own feelings on to someone else.

Example: a hostile husband will blame his hostility on his wife and will say she has an anger management problem.

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15
Q

What is rationalization?

A

A defense mechanism when a client attempts to make unacceptable feelings and behaviors acceptable by justifying the behavior.

Example: a rude person will justify behavior by saying the bad traffic from the morning commute caused it.

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16
Q

What is regression?

A

A defense mechanism when the client returns to an earlier developmental behavior to deal with anxiety.

Example: A ten-year-old is in the hospital to get his tonsils removed and begins sucking his thumb like he did when he was a toddler.

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17
Q

What is repression?

A

A defense mechanism when the client unconsciously blocks the unacceptable thoughts or ideas.

Example: a child who is abused by a parent later has no recollection of the events, but has trouble forming relationships.

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18
Q

What is compensation?

A

A defense mechanism when the client uses a lot of extra effort on strengths to make up for deficiencies.

Example: a client that fails in relationships will put in extra effort to be extremely physically fit.

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19
Q

What is therapeutic communication?

A

A face-to-face interaction that focuses on advancing the physical and emotional well-being of a client.

It is frequently used to get the client to open up about concerns and reflect on a situation for problem-solving.

20
Q

What is active listening?

A

A therapeutic communication technique that shows that the nurse is actively listening to the client.

Example: repeat key points, nod, or ask open-ended questions.

21
Q

What is an open-ended question?

A

A therapeutic communication technique that encourages conversation because it gets the client to open up and requires more than one-word answers.

Example: “Tell me about your relationship with your children.”

22
Q

What is restating/clarification?

A

A therapeutic communication technique that repeats what the client has said to give the client an opportunity to agree, disagree, or clarify the message further.

Example: a severely anorexic client says, “I am ready to eat breakfast today.”
The nurse responds with, “Did I hear that you are ready to eat today?”

23
Q

What is silence?

A

A therapeutic communication technique where nothing is said by the nurse, but sits with the client silently.

This allows time for thoughts to formulate before discussing them.

24
Q

What is presenting reality?

A

A therapeutic communication technique where the nurse states the facts to show the client there is a problem.

Example: the nurse states to the client, “you say you are not an alcoholic but you drink a 6-pack of beer every night.”

25
Q

What is NON-therapeutic communication?

A

An ineffective communication. This type of communication doesn’t focus on the client and closes off communication.

Examples:

  • “Nice weather we are having.”
  • “I’m fine. How are you?”
  • “Don’t worry, I think you’ll be fine.”
  • “You need this procedure or you won’t get better.”
26
Q

What is approval?

A

A non-therapeutic communication technique. It is implying that the client is doing or not doing the right thing and may focus on what pleases the nurse instead of what is best for the client.

Example: the nurse states, “That’s so good!”

27
Q

What is changing the subject?

A

A non-therapeutic communication. The client’s feelings, thoughts, and concerns are avoided.

Example: The client states, “I want to die!”.
The nurse responds with, “Did your parents visit you today?”

28
Q

What are closed-ended questions?

A

A non-therapeutic communication. These questions elicit a yes/no response and prevent the client from opening up.

Example: “Do you feel bad about what happened?” (Sometimes the nurse needs to ask a close-ended question if the client is showing signs of harming themselves are someone else. An example would be “Do you have a plan for suicide?”)

29
Q

What is false reassurance?

A

A non-therapeutic communication technique. It’s when a statement is made that the client has no reason to be worried.

Example: the nurse states, “Don’t worry, you’ll be fine.”

30
Q

What is giving advice?

A

A non-therapeutic communication. It assumes that the client cannot think for themselves. This prevents problem-solving.

Example: the nurse states, “I think you should just listen to your father and do what he says.”

31
Q

What are “why” questions?

A

Non-therapeutic communication. Starting a question with “why? can cause the client to feel defensive. In general, if the client knew “why?”, then they would not be making the statement.

Example: “Why are you so depressed?”

32
Q

What are value judgments?

A

Non-therapeutic communication. A comment is made that addresses their morals and can cause anger or guilt.

Example: the nurse states, “I think you should always listen to your parents even if you don’t like what they say.”

33
Q

What are some important client rights?

A
  • refuse care or meds
  • be treated
  • confidentiality
  • privacy
  • communicate with those outside the hospital
  • least restrictive care
34
Q

What is a voluntary admission?

A

When the client (or guardian) seeks admission for care.

35
Q

What is an involuntary admission?

A

When a client is admitted against their will.

This occurs because the client is an imminent danger to themselves or others.

36
Q

If a client is involuntarily admitted, what is the proper legal procedure?

A

An order from the court, psychiatrist, or primary health care provider is necessary.

If the admission is an immediate emergency, the order can then be gotten later.

37
Q

If a client is involuntarily admitted, what must be provided to the client?

A

Legal counsel.

38
Q

When can a client lose their right to refuse treatment?

A

When they are in immediate danger to self or others.

39
Q

What is “discharge against medical advice”?

A

When the voluntary client is discharged even though the HCP had advised against leaving.

40
Q

What is milieu therapy?

A

The environment in which a client is empowered by setting their own goals and developing relationships with the staff to achieve these goals.

41
Q

What is behavior therapy?

A

When the client changes their negative behavior with positive behavior.

42
Q

What is group therapy?

A

When a therapist leads a small group of individuals all experiencing the same problem.

The group setting allows for feedback and support of each other.

43
Q

Should you ever argue with a client?

A

Never.

44
Q

What is reaction formation?

A

Doing the opposite.

Example: a client with a substance use disorder wil preach about abstinence.

45
Q

What is suppression?

A

A defense mechanism when there is a conscious choice to not remember something.

Example: client doesn’t remember abuse as a child.

46
Q

When is it OK to ask a “why” question to a client?

A

If the client is not following the treatment plan or not taking their medications. There may be financial or social problems that the nurse can help the client with.

47
Q

What is cognitive therapy?

A

When a client changes how they think in order to change how they feel.