Foundations of Mental Health Care 8th Edition by Morrison-Valfre TEST BANK |Complete Chapter 1 – 33 | 100 % Verified

Test Bank Foundations of Mental Health Care
8th Edition by Morrison-Valfre
All Chapters 1 – 33
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Chapter 01: The History of Mental Health Care
Morrison-Valfre: Foundations of Mental Health Care, 8th Edition
MULTIPLE CHOICE

  1. The belief of the ancient Greek philosopher Plato that the rational soul controlled the
    irrational soul could be compared with the belief of the more recent psychological theorist:
    a. Freud
    b. Pinel
    c. Fisher
    d. Rush
    ANS: A
    Sigmund Freud believed that mental illness was, in part, caused by forces both within and
    outside the personality. Philippe Pinel advocated acceptance of mentally ill individuals as
    human beings in need of medical assistance. Alice Fisher was a Florence Nightingale nurse
    who cared for the mentally ill, and Dr. Benjamin Rush was the author of the book Diseases of
    the Mind.
    PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Comprehension REF: p. 4
    OBJ: 2 TOP: Early Years of Mental Health
    KEY: Nursing Process Step: Assessment MSC: Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrity
  2. During the mid-1500s, behaviors associated with mental illness were more accurately
    recorded by professionals. This practice led to for different abnormal
    behaviors.
    a. Classifications
    b. Diagnosing
    c. Treatment
    d. Education
    ANS: A
    Classification of abnormal behaviors did not begin until this time, after the practice of more
    accurate recording of behaviors was begun. Diagnoses, treatment guidelines, and any
    education regarding mental health disorders were not available during this period.
    PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF: p. 5
    OBJ: 3 TOP: Mental Illness During the Renaissance
    KEY: Nursing Process Step: Assessment MSC: Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrity
  3. During the latter part of the eighteenth century, psychiatry became a separate branch of
    medicine, and inhumane treatment was greatly diminished by the French hospital director:
    a. Dix
    b. Beers
    c. Pinel
    d. Carter
    ANS: C

Philippe Pinel advocated acceptance of the mentally ill, as well as proper treatment. Dorothea
Dix crusaded for construction of mental health hospitals. Clifford Beers wrote the book A
Mind That Found Itself. President Jimmy Carter established the President’s Commission on
Mental Health in 1978.
PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF: p. 5
OBJ: 4 TOP: Mental Illness in the Eighteenth Century
KEY: Nursing Process Step: Assessment MSC: Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrity

  1. In 1841, surveyed asylums, jails, and almshouses throughout the United
    States, Canada, and Scotland and is credited with bringing about public awareness and reformfor
    the care of the mentally ill.
    a. Sigmund Freud
    b. John Cade
    c. Florence Nightingale
    d. Dorothea Dix
    ANS: D
    Dorothea Dix spent 20 years surveying facilities that housed mentally ill individuals and is
    credited with major changes in the care of the mentally ill. Sigmund Freud introduced the
    concept of psychoanalysis, John Cade discovered lithium carbonate for the treatment of
    bipolar disorder, and Florence Nightingale trained nurses in England in the 1800s.
    PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF: p. 6
    OBJ: 4 TOP: Mental Illness in the Nineteenth Century
    KEY: Nursing Process Step: Assessment MSC: Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrity
  2. During the 1930s, what common treatment for schizophrenia caused clients to fall into a comathat
    could last as long as 50 hours?
    a. Electroconvulsive therapy
    b. Insulin therapy
    c. Humoral therapy

ANS: D
d. Amphetamine therapy
ANS: B
Insulin therapy was believed to successfully treat schizophrenia in the early 1900s.
Amphetamines were used to treat depression, and electroconvulsive therapy was used for
severe depression. Humoral therapy, which originated in ancient Greece and Rome, was a
belief that mental illness resulted from an imbalance of the humors of air, fire, water, and
earth.
PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF: p. 8
OBJ: 5 TOP: Influences of War on Mental Health Therapies
KEY: Nursing Process Step: Assessment MSC: Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrity

  1. In the early twentieth century, a frontal lobotomy was a common treatment for violent
    behaviors. Which description of this procedure is accurate?
    a. A procedure that delivers an electrical stimulus to the frontal lobes of the brain
    b. A surgical procedure that drills holes in the front of the skull to drain fluid
    c. A surgical procedure that severs the frontal lobes of the brain from the thalamus
    d. A surgical procedure that inserts implants into the frontal lobes of the brain
    ANS: C
    A frontal lobotomy is a surgical procedure in which the frontal lobes of the brain are severed
    from the thalamus.
    PTS: 1 DIF: Cognitive Level: Knowledge REF: p. 6
    OBJ: 5 TOP: Influences of War on Mental Health Therapies
    KEY: Nursing Process Step: Assessment MSC: Client Needs: Psychosocial Integrity
  2. Which class of drugs was introduced in the 1930s for the treatment of depression?
    a. SSRIs
    b. Tricyclic antidepressants
    c. MAOIs
    d. Amphetamines

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