NUR 2459 / NUR2459 Exam 1 (Latest 2024 / 2025): Mental And Behavioral Health Nursing – Rasmussen
NUR 2459 Mental & Behavioral Health Nursing
Mental Health Exam 1
Question:
Application of the Nursing Process
Answer:
- Nursing Diagnosis
- Outcome considerations
- Planning and implementation
- Evaluation
Question:
Spiritual concepts nursing diagnoses includes:
Answer: - Risk for spiritual distress
- Spiritual distress
- Readiness for enhanced spiritual well-being
- Risk for impaired religiosity
- Impaired religiosity
- Readiness for enhanced religiosity
Question:
Spiritual concepts outcome identification means the patient:
Answer:
- Identifies meaning and purpose in their life that reinforce hope, peace,
and contentment - Verbalizes acceptance of self as a worthwhile human being
- Accepts and incorporates change into life in a healthy manner
- Expresses understanding of difficulties between current life situation and
interruption in previous religious beliefs and activities
Question:
Spiritual concepts for planning and implementation means:
Answer:
Susceptible to an impaired ability to experience and integrate meaning and
purpose in life through connectedness within self, literature, nature, or a
power greater than oneself that may compromise health
Risk factors include: physical, psychosocial, developmental, and
environmental
Question:
Spiritual concepts evaluation is:
Answer: - Directed at achievement of established outcomes
- Includes continuous reassessment
- Includes family and extended support systems
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Ethical codes serve two purposes
-act as guidelines for standards of practice
-let the public know what behaviors can be expected from their health care providers
Autonomy
respecting the rights of others to make their own decisions
Beneficence
Doing the greatest good for the client
Nonmaleficence
Do no harm
Justice
Justice as fairness
Veracity
Truthfulness
4 Patient Rights
- Refuse treatment
- Withhold consent
- Withdraw consent any time
- Retract consent; must be honored, whether verbal or written
Confidentiality and right to privacy means what?
Duty to respect private information
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Right to receive treatment and to have confidential medical records. Can only be breech when there is a duty to warn a client’s potential victim of harm.
A duty to warn (protection of a third party)
A client’s potential victim of potential harm
Suspected child or elder abuse
Mandated reporter, know your state laws
Informed consent
If a clinician approached the client with medication in hand and the client indicates a willingness to receive the medication, then informed consent has occurred. Although consent was given, they can change their mind
Restraints and seclusion
- Only use after all other interventions have been tried and failed
- Shortest duration is always the rule of thumb
- Should never be used as a form of punishment
- Must be trained
False imprisonment
- Intent to confine to a specific area
- Indefensible use of seclusion or restraints
- Detain voluntarily admitted client with no agency or legal policies to support detaining
When a client initiates the request for mental health services, it is considered a voluntary admission. Can patients discharge at any time?
Voluntary admission clients may legally discharge themselves at any time
Involuntary commitment is a process for institutionalization initiated by someone other than the client and include what? (5)
- Restriction of client’s rights
- Clients may stay for days to years
- Client is imminently dangerous to self
- Client is a danger to others
- Client unable to take care of their basic needs
Reasonable and prudent person theory involve what two nursing liabilities?
Negligence and malpractice
Negligence
Omission (or commission) of an act that a reasonable and prudent person would (or would not) do
Examples: when a nurse fails to act in a manner that a reasonable prudent nurse would act under the same circumstances, a nurse who fails to assess for suicide potential in a client who has threatened suicide in the past, Certain conditions must be met to determine negligence and hold the nurse responsible
Malpractice
Failure to exercise an accepted degree of professional skill that results in injury, loss, or damage
Examples: Suicidal client to be continuously observed (duty). Staff goes to lunch, leaving the client alone (breech of duty). During this time, client commits suicide (proximate cause) and dies (damage). The staff is guilty of malpractice because no reasonable and prudent caregiver would leave a client unattended in a similar circumstance.
Crisis
A sudden event in one’s life that disturbs homeostasis, during which usual coping mechanisms cannot resolve the problem
Crisis Intervention (3):
- Any stressful situation can precipitate a crisis
- Crisis intervention and resolution requires problem-solving skills
- Assistance with problem solving during the crisis period preserves self-esteem and promotes growth with resolution
Phases in development of crisis
- exposed to precipitating stressor
- when problem solving techniques do not relieve the stressor, anxiety increases further
- All possible resources called on to relieve the discomfort
- If resolution does not occur in previous phases, tension mounts beyond a further threshold or it’s burned increases to breaking point- major disorganization of the individual occurs, often with a drastic results
Whether individuals experience a crisis in response to a stressful situation depends on three factors:
- Individuals perception of the event
- Availability of situational supports
- Availability of adequate coping mechanisms
Dispositional crisis
an acute response to an external situational stressor
Crisis of anticipated life transitions
Normal life-cycle transition that may be anticipated but over which the individual may feel a lack of control
Crisis of resulting from traumatic stress
Precipitated by an unexpected, external stressor over which the individual has little or no control and from which he or she feels emotionally overwhelmed and defeated
Maturational/Developmental crisis
Occurs in response to a situation that triggers emotions related to unresolved conflicts in one’s life
Crisis reflecting psychopathology
An emotional crisis in which preexisting psychopathology has been instrumental in precipitating the crisis or in which psychopathology significantly impairs or complicates adaptive resolution
Psychiatric emergency
A crisis situation in which general functioning has been severely impaired and the individual rendered incompetent or unable to assume personal responsibility
Phases of crisis intervention
Phase 1: Assessment
Phase 2: Planning of therapeutic intervention
Phase 3: Intervention
Phase 4: Evaluation of crisis resolution and anticipatory planning
Providing healthcare in an environment of cultural awareness and sensitivity is essential to:
- Accomplish client-centered care
- Ensure that all clients receive adequate resources
- Ensure that all clients have access to treatment
Spirituality
The human quality that gives meaning and sense of purpose to an individual’s existence
Religion
A set of beliefs, values, rites, and rituals adopted by a group of people. The practices are usually grounded in the teachings of a spiritual leader
Assessment strategies for cultures:
- Ask preferred name
- What language do you speak at home?
- Are you able to read and write English if not, what language?
- Are you comfortable?
- Do you have any concerns you would like to discuss?
With assessment be sure to:
- Ensure comfort prior to interview
- Maintain safe distance and observe cues from patient
- Be aware of cultural differences
- Be aware of objects that create barriers to comfort
- Ensure the physical environment is arranged to ensure safety, security, and familiarity
When to use interpreters?
When the patient does not speak English
Application of the Nursing Process
- Nursing Diagnosis
- Outcome considerations
- Planning and implementation
- Evaluation
Spiritual concepts nursing diagnoses includes:
- Risk for spiritual distress
- Spiritual distress
- Readiness for enhanced spiritual well-being
- Risk for impaired religiosity
- Impaired religiosity
- Readiness for enhanced religiosity
Spiritual concepts outcome identification means the patient:
- Identifies meaning and purpose in their life that reinforce hope, peace, and contentment
- Verbalizes acceptance of self as a worthwhile human being
- Accepts and incorporates change into life in a healthy manner
- Expresses understanding of difficulties between current life situation and interruption in previous religious beliefs and activities
Spiritual concepts for planning and implementation means:
Susceptible to an impaired ability to experience and integrate meaning and purpose in life through connectedness within self, literature, nature, or a power greater than oneself that may compromise health
Risk factors include: physical, psychosocial, developmental, and environmental
Spiritual concepts evaluation is:
- Directed at achievement of established outcomes
- Includes continuous reassessment
- Includes family and extended support systems
What percentage of people with bipolar disorder have religious delusions?
15% of people
Definition of Rights of a patient
Described as a power or privilege or existence to which one has a just claim