Psychiatric Nursing Overview and Techniques
Psychiatric Nursing Overview and Techniques
PSYCHIATRIC NURSING
FOUNDATIONS OF PSYCHIATRIC MENTAL NURSING
Mental Health
❖ It is a state of emotional, psychological, and social wellness evidenced by satisfying personal relationships, effective
behavior and coping, apositiveself-conceptand emotional stability
Mental Disorder
❖ A clinically significant behavioral or psychological syndrome or pattern that occurs in an individual and is associated with
present distress or disability or with significantly increased risk of suffering, death, pain, disability or an important loss of
freedom (APA, 2000)
❖ Self-esteem
❖ Mastering Orientation
❖ Reality Orientation
❖ Stress Management
Ancient Times
❖ A belief that any sickness indicates displeasure of the gods and punishment for sins and wrongdoing ❖
Peoplewithmentaldisordersareeither viewed as divine or demonic
❖ Divine = worshipped and adored
❖ Aristotledeveloped atheoryaboutthe amounts of blood, water and yellow and black bile in the body ❖
Thesefoursubstancescorrespondwith happiness, calmness, anger, and sadness.
❖ Any imbalance from the four substances will cause mental disorders
Renaissance
❖ People with mental illness were distinguished from criminals
❖ Also during this period, mentally ill people were viewed as evil and possessed.
Period of Enlightenment
❖ Philippe Pinel and William Tuke
❖ Dorothea Dix advocated adequate shelter, nutritious food and warm clothing to those who are mentally ill.
❖ Nurses use themselves as a therapeutic tool to establish therapeutic relationship with the client ❖
Introduced by Hildegard Peplau (1952)
❖ According to him, nurses must have a clear understanding of themselves to promote client's growth. ❖
Therapeutic use of self requires self-awareness
SELF-AWARENESS
❖ It is the processby which the nurse gains recognition of his or her own feelings, beliefs, and attitudes. Goal: To know
oneself so that one's values,attitudes, and beliefs are not projected to the client, interfering with nursing care.
❖ Onetoolthat is useful in learning about oneself is Johari's Window
❖ Role Play
❖ Introspection
❖ Discussion
THERAPEUTIC COMMUNICATION
❖ It is an interpersonal interaction between the nurse and client during which the nurse focuses on the client's specific needs
to promote effective exchange of information
Goals
• Establish a therapeutic nurse—client relationship.
• Identify the most important client concern at that moment (the client-centered goal).
• Guide the client toward identifying a plan of action to a satisfying and socially acceptable resolution.
Accepting
- Indicating reception
Examples: "Yes";"I follow what you said"; Nodding
Rationale:An accepting response indicates the nurse has heard and followed the train of thought. It does not indicate
agreement but is non-judgmental.
Broad Openings
- Allowing client to take the initiative in introducing the topic
Examples: "Is there something you'dlike to talk about?";'Where would you like me to begin?"
Rationale: Broad opening makes explicit that the client has the leadin the interaction;may stimulate him or her to take the
initiative
Encouraging Comparison
-Helping the client to understand by looking at similarities and differences.
Examples:'Was it something like?"; "Have you had similar experiences?"
Rationale:Comparing ideas,experiences, or relationships brings out many recurring themes;
He or she might recall past coping strategies that were effective or remember the he or she has survived a similar
situation
Encouraging Expression
- Asking client to appraise the quality of his or her experience.
Examples:'Whatare your feelings in regard to?"
Rationale:Encourages the client to make his or her own appraisal rather than accepting the opinion of others.
Exploring
- Delving further into a subject or idea.
Examples; "Tell me more about that."; 'Would you describe it more fully'?"; 'What kind of work?" Rationale: This can
help them examine the issue more fully; If the client expresses an unwillingness to explore a subject, however, the
nurse must respect his or her wishes.
Focusing
- Concentrating on a single point.
Examples: "This point seems looking at more closely.";"Of all the concerns you have mentioned, Which is most
troublesome?"
Rationale: This encourages the client to concentrate his or her energies on a single point, which may prevent a multitude of
factors or problems from overwhelming the client; useful technique when a client jumps from one topic to another.
General Leads
- Giving encouragement to continue.
Examples:"Goon.";"And then?";"Tell me about it."
Rationale:Thisindicates that the nurse is listening and following what the client is saying without taking away the
initiative for the interaction; encourage the client to continue if he or she is hesitant or uncomfortable about the topic.
Giving Information
-Making available the facts that the client needs..
Examples:"My name is...";"Visiting hours are. . ."; "My purpose in being here is..."
Rationale: Informing the client of facts increases his or her knowledge about a topic or lets the client know what to
expect; builds trust with the client.
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Giving Recognition
- Acknowledging, indicating awareness.
Examples:"Good morning,Mr.S...";"You've finished your list of things to do."' "I noticed that you've combed your hair."
Rationale: Greeting the client by name, indicating awareness of change, or noting efforts the client has made all show that
the nurse recognizes the client as a person, as an individual.
Making Observations
- Verbalizing what the nurse perceives.
Examples: "You appear tense."; "Areyou uncomfortable when . . ?"; "I notice that you are biting your
Rationale: Sometimes clients cannot verbalize or make themselves understood.
Offering Self
- Making oneself available.
Examples: "I will sit with you a while."; "I will stay here with you."; "I am interested in what you think." Rationale: The
nurse can offer his or her presence, interest, and desire to understand; It is important that this offer is unconditional, that is,
the client does not have to respond verbally to get the nurse's attention.
Presenting Reality
-Offering for consideration that which is real.
Examples: "I see no one else in the room."; "That sound was a car back firing."; "Your mother is not here.I am a
nurse."
Rationale:When it is obvious that a client is misinterpreting reality, the nurse can indicate what is real.
Reflecting
- Directing client actions, thoughts, and feelings back to the client.
Examples
Client: "Do you think I should tell the doctor?"
Nurse: "Do you think you should?"
Client: "My brother spends all my money and then has the nerve to ask for more."
Nurse: "This causes you to feel angry'?"
Rationale: This encourages the client to recognize and accept his or her own feelings.
Restating
- Repeating the main idea expressed.
Examples
Client: "I can't sleep. I stay awake all night." Nurse: "You have difficulty sleeping."
Client: "I am really mad. I am really upset." Nurse: "You're really mad and upset."
Rationale: Restatement lets the client know that heor she communicated the idea effectively; encourages the client to
continue
Seeking Information
-Seeking to make clear that which is not meaningful or that which is vague.
Examples: "I am not sure that I follow."; "Have I heard you correctly?'
'Rationale:This can help the nurse to avoid making assumptions that understanding has occurred when it has not;helps the
client to articulate thoughts,feelings,and ideas more clearly.
Silence
-Absence of verbal communication,which provides time for the client to put thoughts or feelings in towords,regain
composure, or continue talking.
Examples:Nurse says nothing but continues to maintain eye contact and conveys interest
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Rationale: This often encourages the client to verbalize provided that it is interested and expectant; gives the client time to
organize thoughts, direct the topic of interaction, or focus on issues that are most important.
Suggesting Collaboration
- Offering to share, to strive, to work with the client for his or her benefit.
Examples:"Perhaps you and I can discuss and discover the triggers for your anxiety."; "Let's go to your room and I will help
you find what you are looking for."
Rationale:The nurseseeks to offer a relationship in which the client can identify problems in living with others, grow
emotionally, and improve the ability to form satisfactory relationships.
Summarizing
-Organizing and summing up that which has gone before.
Examples:"Have I got this straight?"; "You've said that. ."; "During the past hour, you and I have discussed.." Rationale:
This brings out the important points of the discussion and to increase the awareness and understanding of both
participants;omits the irrelevantand organizes the pertinent aspects of the interaction.
Voicing Doubt
-Expressing uncertainty about the reality of the client's perceptions.
Examples: "Isn't that unusual?"; "Really?"; "That is hard to believe."
Rationale:This permits the client to become aware that others do not necessarily perceive events in the same way or draw
the same conclusions.
NON-THERAPEUTIC COMMUNICATION
Advising Examples: "I think you advising should."; 'Why don't you?" Rationale:
- telling the client what to do This implies that client what to do only the nurse knows what is best for the
client.
Challenging Example: ”But how can you be the president of the United State?” “if you
– demanding proof from the client are dead, why is your heart beating
Rationale: Often the nurse believe that if he or she can challenge the client
to prove unrealistic idea, the client will realize there is no “proof” and then will
recognize reality. Actually challenging causes the client to defend the
Defending Example:” the hospital has a fine reputation”; “ I am sure your doctors has
- attempting to protect someone or your best interest in mind.”
something from the verbal attack Rationale: this implies that he or she no right to express impression,
opinion or feeling
Indicatingthe existence of an external Examples:'What makes you say that?"; 'What made you do that?";
source “Who told you that you were a prophet?"
-Attributingthe source of thoughts, feelings, Rationale: The nurse can ask, “What happened?" Or “What events led you
and behavior to others or to outside to draw such a conclusion?";But to question “What made you think that?"
influences. implies that the client was made or compelled to think in a certain way.
Making stereotype comments Example: “Now tell me about this problem. You know I have to find out”;”
- offering meaningless clichés or tripe tell your psychiatric history”.
comments Rationale: Tend to make the client feel used or invaded; clients have the
right not to talk about issues or concerns if they choose.
Reassuring Example: “I would not worry about that”;” everything would be alright”;
- indicates that there is no reason for you are coming along just fine.”
anxiety or other feelings of discomfort Rationale: This is completely devalues the client’s feelings.
Requesting an explanation Example:“why do you think that?; “ why do you feel that way?’’
- asking the client to provide reasons for Rationale: using “ why” question is intimidating
thoughts, feelings, behaviors, events
Testing Example: “ do you know what kind of hospital this is”; “do you still have the
– appraising the client’s degree of insight. idea that…?’’
Rationale: This is forces the client to try to recognize his or her problems.
Using Denial Example: Client: "I am nothing.
-Refusing to admit that problem exists. Nurse:"Ofcourseyou are [Link] something."
Client: "I am dead."
Nurse: "Do not be silly."
Rationale:denies the client's feelings or the seriousness of
the situation by dismissing his or her comments without attempting to
discover the feelings or meaning behind them
Word salad Example: “ corn, potatoes, jump up, play games, grass, cupboard.”
- It is a combination of jumbled words
and phrase that are disconnected or
incoherent and make no sense to the
listener
Perseveration Example:
-Persistent adherence to a single idea or Nurse: "How have you been sleeping lately?"
topicandverbal repetition of a sentence, Client:"Ithinkpeoplehave been following me."
phrase, or word, even when another Nurse: 'Where do you live?"
person attempts to change the topic. Client:"At my place people have been following
Nurse: 'What do you like to do in your free time?"
Client: "Nothing because people are following me."
Echolalia Example:
- Client's imitation or repetition of what Nurse: Can you tell me how you’re feeling?
the nurse says. Client: Can you tell me how you’re feeling,
Delusion The client may claimtobe engaged to a famous movie star or related to some
-False belief which is inconsistent with public figure such as claiming to be the daughter of the President of the
one's knowledge and culture Philippines
Hallucination The client may claim to be speaking with an imaginary person commanding
- False sensory perceptions, or him to do something bad to another person.
perceptual experiences that do not really
exist.
Neologisms Example:
-Words invented by the client "I'm afraid of grittiz. If there are any grittiz here, I will have to leave. Are you a
grittiz?"
Inappropriate Affect
❖ Disharmony between the stimulus and the emotional reaction.
Blunted Affect
❖ Severe reduction in emotional reaction.
Flat Affect
❖ Absence or near absence of emotional/facial reaction that would indicate emotions or mood
Apathy
❖ Feelings of indifference toward people, activities, and events
Ambivalence
❖ Holding seemingly contradictory beliefs or feelings about the same person, event or situation. Presence of two
opposing feelings.
Depersonalization
❖ Clients feel detached from their behavior
❖ Although client can state his name correctly, he feels as if his body belongs to someone else, or that his spirit is
detached from is body.
Derealization
❖ Feeling of strangeness towards the environment
❖ Environmental objects become smaller larger, or seem unfamiliar.
Echopraxia
❖ The pathological imitation of posture or action of others
❖ Imitation of the movements and gestures of another person whom the client is observing
Waxy Flexibility
❖ Maintaining the desires position for long periods of time without discomfort even when it is awkward or
uncomfortable
DISTURBANCES IN MEMORY
Confabulation
❖ Filling a memory gap with detailed fantasy believed by the teller
Amnesia
❖ Inability to recall past events
T — rust
R — apport
U — nconditional positive regard
S — etting limits
T — herapeutic communication
❖ Goal — directed
❖ Time-limited
❖ Professional
Orientation Phase
❖ Begins when the nurse and client meet
❖ Tasks: establishing rapport, developing trust, assessment, establishing roles, purpose of the meeting, parameters of
subsequent
❖ Major Task: develop a mutually acceptable contract
Working Phase
❖ Longest and most productive phase of the nurse-patient relationship
❖ Limit-setting is employed
• Problem identification
• Exploitation
✔ Nurse guides the client to examine feelings and responses and to develop better coping skills and a more
positive self-image
• Transference
• Countertransference
❖ Therapist displaces on to the client attitudes or feelings from his / her past
• Resistance
• Termination Phase
ANTI-PSYCHOTICS
❖ Also known as Neuroleptics
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Side Effects
1. Extrapyramidal Symptoms (EPS)
❖ Major side effects of antipsychotic agents
❖ EPS happen when there is blockade of dopamine (D2) receptors in the midbrainregion of the brain stem.
Acute Dystonia
• Torticollis
• Opisthotonus
• Oculogyric crisis
• Difficulty swallowing
• Laryngospasm
• Respiratory difficulties
Treatment
• Intramuscular Benztropine mesylate (Cogentin)
• IM or IV Diphenhydramine (Benadryl)
PseudoParkinsonism
• Stiff, stooped posture
• Mask-like facies
• Cogwheel rigidity
• Drooling
Treatment
• Changing antipsychotic medication that has lower incidence of EPS
Akathisia
• Inability to sit still
• Restless/anxious
Treatment
• Change of antipsychotic medication
Tardive Dyskinesia
• Vermiform (Worm-like) tongue movements
• Permanent, irreversible
Treatment
• Valbenazine
• Deutetrabenazine
• Progression can be arrested by decreasing the antipsychotic medication
❖ Rigidity
❖ High fever
Treatment
• Immediate discontinuance of all antipsychotic medications
❖ Side effects usually decrease within 3 to 4 weeks but do not entirely remit
MANIFESTATIONS
Orthostatic hypotension
Dry mouth
Constipation
Urinary hesitance or retention
Blurry vision
Dry eyes
Photophobia
Nasal congestion
Decreased memory
Nursing Interventions
• Stool softeners
• Calorie-free beverages
NURSING ALERT
Droperidol, Thioridazine, Mesoridazine
These drugs may lengthen the QT interval to potentially life-threatening cardiac dysrhythmia or cardiac arrest
Medication Compliance • If you forget a dose of antipsychoticmedication, take it if the dose is only 3 to 4
hours late. If the missed dose is more than 4 hours late or the next dose is due,
omit the forgotten dose
• If you have difficult remembering your medication, use a chart to record doses when
taken, or use a pill box labelled with dosage times and/or days of the week to help
you remember when to take medication.
NURSING ALERT
Clozapine
✔ May cause agranulocytosis
✔ Clients should have a baseline WBC count anddifferential before initiation of treatment
ANTI-DEPRESSANT DRUGS
• Anxiety disorders
• Depressedphaseofbipolar disorder
Nursing Alert
• Potentially lethal if taken in an overdose.
• Depressed or impulsive clients who are taking these drugs need to have prescriptions and refills in limited
amounts to decrease the risk.
TRICYCLIC DRUGS
• Sexual dysfunction
Amoxapine (ascendin)
• Agitation
Clomipramine (anafranil)
• delirium
• This drugshould not be givenwith other MAOIs, tricyclic antidepressants, Meperidine (Demerol), CNS
depressants
MAOI DRUGS Nursing Interventions • Avoid tyramine
Phenelzine (Nardil)
Tranylcypromine (Parnate) lsocarboxazid foods
(Marplan) Side Effects
• Daytime sedation
• Insomnia
• Weight gain
• Dry mouth • Orthostatic hypotension • Sexual
dysfunction
• No mature or aged cheeses or dishes made with cheese, such as lasagna, pizza (exceptcottage cheese. cream cheese,
ricotta cheese, and processed cheese slices)
• No aged meats such as pepperoni, salami, mortadella, summer sausage, beef logs, and similar products. • No Italian
broad beans (fava) pods or banana [Link] pulp and all other fruits and vegetables are permitted • Avoid all tap
beers and microbrewery [Link] no more than two cans or bottles of beer (including non alcoholic beer) or 4 ounces of
wine per day
Headache Nefazodone
Trazodone
Dizziness Venlafaxine
Sweating
Sedation
priapism Trazodone
Nursing Alert
❖ Bupropion
NURSING RESPONSIBILITIES
SIDE EFFECTS INTERVENTION
Mood-stabilizing Drugs
❖ Used to treat bipolar disorder
❖ Functions to:
• Preventing or minimizing the highs and lows that characterize bipolar illness
Lithium is the most established mood stabilizer; this normalizes the reuptake of serotonin, NE, acetylcholine &
dopamine.
- Other drugs that are effective in stabilizing the mood:
• Carbamazepine (Tegretol)
• Gabapentin (Neurontin)
• Lamotrigine (Lamictal)
Lithium
- Available in tablets, capsules, liquid sustained-released form.
- No parenteral forms
- Normal level: 0.5 — 1.5 mEq/L
- Therapeutic level: 0.6 – 1.2 mEq/L
- Common side effects:
• Mild nausea/diarrhea
• Anorexia
• Polydipsia
• Polyuria
• Fatigue
• Lethargy
TOXIC EFFECTS
• Severe diarrhea
• Severe vomiting
• Muscle weakness
• Lack of coordination
If left untreated, symptoms mayworsen and can lead to renal failure, coma and death
Lithium levels exceed 3.0 mEq/L = Dialysis
NURSING ALERT
Valproic acid can cause hepatic failurein fatality
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• For the fine hand tremors ask the physician to prescribe a beta-blocker such as propranolol (Inderal) • To
helpminimize weight gain,get a balance diet and get regular exercise. Expect some weight gain. • Normal
sodium intake (2-3days)
• Minimize side effects of sedation and drowsiness from anticonvulsant medications by taking larger dosesat
bedtimeand smaller doses during the day
• If you are takinglithium, keep water intake in a normal rangeand avoid heavy sweating, because this
increases serum lithium levels rapidly
ANTI-ANXIETY DRUGS (ANXIOLYTICS)
❖ Used to treat:
• Anxiety disorders
• Insomnia
• OCD
• Depression
• Alcohol withdrawal
ANTI-ANXIETY DRUGS
Alprazolam (Xanax)
Chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
Clonazepam (Klonopin)
Diazepam (Valium)
Flurazepam (Dalmane)
Lorazepam (Ativan)
Oxazepam (Serax)
Temazepam (Restoril)
Triazolam (Halcion)
Buspirone (BuSpar)
ANTI-ANXIETY DRUGS: NURSING RESPONSIBILITIES
❖ It is important for clients to know that antianxiety agents are aimed at relieving symptoms, such as anxiety or
insomnia; it does not treat the underlying problems that cause the anxiety.
❖ Benzodiazepines strongly potentiate the effects of alcohol
❖ One drink may have the effect of three drinks (alcohol)
❖ Benzodiazepine withdrawal can be fatal: once a course of therapy has been started, benzodiazepines should never
be discontinued abruptly without the supervision of the physician.
❖ Take anxiolytic drugs only as prescribed.
Stimulants
• First used to treat psychiatric disorders
• At present,they are used for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder in adolescents and children
DRUGS SIDE EFFECTS
Methylphenidate (Ritalin) • Anorexia • Dizziness
NURSING ALERT
Pemoline
• Can cause life-threatening liver failure
❖ Try a dosage schedule that provides a dose of medication before beginning routine tasks of concentration such as nightly
homework.
❖ Dry mouth: Calorie-free beverages or sugar-free candy
❖ Medications should be given in a manner that is not intrusive,nor should it draw undue attention to the child.
Disulfiram (Antabuse)
• Sensitizingagent that causes anadverse reaction when mixed with alcohol in the body.
• Usefulfor persons who are motivated to abstain from drinking and who are not impulsive. •
Symptoms begin to appear after five to ten minutes and may last from 30 minutes to 2 hours ✔ Facial
and body flushing
✔ Throbbing headache
✔ Sweating
✔ Dry mouth
✔ Nausea
✔ Vomiting
✔ Dizziness
✔ Weakness
• In severe cases, there may be chest pain,dyspnea, severe hypotension, confusion and even death
• Drowsiness
• Halitosis
• Tremor
• Impotence
Nursing Responsibilities
Common products that may contain alcohol:
• Shaving cream
• Aftershave lotion
• Cologne
• Deodorant
• Client must read the products carefully and select items that are alcohol-free
ELECTROCONVULSIVE THERAPY
Functions:
• Treat depression in select groups such as clients who do not respond to antidepressants
• Indicated to clients who are actively suicidal while waiting weeks for full effects of antidepressant medication
Preparation:
• NPO after midnight
Procedure
• Client receives short acting anesthetic so she is not awake during the procedure
• The brain is monitored with EEG while the electrical stimulation is delivered
• Following ECT the client may be mildly confused, disoriented and may have short term memory impairment.
Voltage of electrical current administered to the 70-50 volts
client
• Recent Fracture
• Cardiac Condition
• Retinal detachment
• Pregnancy
• Headache
• Apnea
• Fracture
• Respiratory depression
• ECTcausesconfusionand disorientation; thus, it is important to help with reorientation (time, place, person) as the
patient emerges from this unconscious state.
• Nurse might need to administer a benzodiazepine, as needed.
• Observation is necessary until the patient is oriented and steady, particularly when the patient first attempts to
stand.
• All aspects of the treatment should be carefully documented for the patient's record.
PERSONALITY STRUCTURE
❖ Freud conceptualized personality structure as having three components
ID
❖ Seeks instant gratification; causes impulsive, unthinking behavior; and has no regard for rules or social
convention
SUPER EGO
❖ Values, and parental and social expectations, therefore, it is in direct opposition to the id.
EGO
❖ Balancing or mediating force between the id and the [Link] ego represents mature and adaptive behavior that
allows a person to function successfully in the world
EGO DEFENSE MECHANISM
RATIONALIZATION
❖ Excusing own behaviorto avoid responsibility, conflict, anxiety, or loss of self-respect
Examples: Student blames failure on teacher being mean; Man says he beats his wife because she does not listen to him.
REACTION FORMATION
❖ Acting the opposite of what one thinks are feels.
Examples:Woman who never wanted to have children becomes a super-mom;Person who despises the boss tells
everyone what a great boss she is.
REGRESSION
❖ Moving back to previous developmental stage in order to feel safe or have needs met.
Examples: Five-year-old asks fora bottle when new baby brother is being fed; Man pouts like a four-year-old if he is not the
center of his girlfriend's attention.
REPRESSION
❖ Excluding emotionally painful or anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings
❖ Unconscious forgetting
Examples: Woman has no memoryof themugging she suffered yesterday; Woman has no memorybefore age 7 when she
was removed from abusive parents.
SUPRESSION
❖ Excluding emotionally painful or anxiety-provoking thoughts and feelings
❖ Conscious forgetting
Examples: Woman has tried to forget her memoryof the financial problems she had in the past.
DISPLACEMENT
❖ Ventilation of intense feelings toward persons less threatening than the one who aroused those feelings.
Examples: A person who is mad at the boss yells at his or her spouse
COMPENSATION
❖ Over achievement in one area to offset real or perceived deficiencies in another area
Examples: Napoleon complex: Diminutive man becoming an emperor; Nurse with low self-esteem works double shifts so her
supervisor will like her
CONVERSION
❖ Expression of an emotional conflict through the development of a physical symptom usually sensorimotor in nature.
Example: A teenager forbidden to see x-rated movies is tempted to do so by friends and develops blindness, and the
teenager is unconcerned about the loss of sight
DENIAL
❖ Failure to acknowledge an unbearable condition; failure to admit the reality of a situation, or how one enables the
problem to continue
Examples: Diabetic eating chocolate candy; spending money freely when broke; Waiting 3 days to seek help for severe
abdominal pain
Conscious
❖ Perceptions,thoughts,and emotions that existin the person's awareness such as being aware of happy feelings or
thinking about a loved one
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❖ Part of the mind that contains information that can be recalled at will
Example: An adult remembering what he or she did, thought, or felt as a child.
Unconsciousness
❖ Realm of thoughts and feelings that motivate a person, even though he or she is totally unaware of them. ❖
This realm includes most defense mechanisms and some instinctual drives or motivations. ❖ It is the largest part
of the mind; contains materials and information that can never be recalled
2. Music Therapy
❖ Use of music to facilitate relaxation, expression of feelings and outlet of tension
3. Play Therapy
❖ Enables the patient to experience intense emotion ina safe environment with the use of play
Example:For victims of child abuse, give dolls.
4. Group Therapy
❖ Therapeutic interactions of three or more patients with a therapist to relieve emotional difficulties, increase self
esteem, develop insight and improve behavior in relation with others
❖ Minimum number of members in a group is 3, while the ideal number is 8 —10
Types of Group
❖ Therapeutic Group
❖ Socialization Group
• To lessen isolation
5. Milieu Therapy
❖ Treatment by means ofcontrolled modification of the patients' environment to facilitate positive behavioral change ❖
Nurse identifies what each patient needs from the therapeutic milieu, while keeping in mind the needs of the larger patient
group
6. Family Therapy
❖ Focuses on the total family as an interactional system
7. Psychoanalysis
❖ Focuses on the exploration of the unconscious, to facilitate identification of the patient's defenses ❖ Behavioral
disorders are related to unresolved anxiety-provoking childhood experiences that are repressed into the unconscious
❖ Goal is to bring repressed experiences into conscious awareness and to learn healthier means of coping with
anxiety.
❖ Utilizes dream analysis and free association (verbalization of thoughts without censorship)
8. Hypnotherapy
❖ Involves various methods and techniques to induce a transtate where the patient becomes submissive to
instructions
9. Humor Therapy
❖ Use of humor to facilitate expression of feelings and to enhance interaction
❖ Therapeutic laughing lessens the high levels of tension that often as company discussions of serious matters.
❖ It attempts to streng then a desired behavior or response by reinforcement, either positive or negative
Positive reinforcement
• If the desired behavior is assertiveness, whenever the client uses assertiveness skills in a communication group, the
group leader provides positive reinforcement by giving the client attention and positive feedback. • For example, a teacher
praises her student for getting high grades, so that the student will be motivated to get high grades again the next time.
Negative reinforcement
• Involves removing a stimulus immediately after a behavior occurs so that the behavior is more likely to occur again.
• For example, if a client becomes anxious when waiting to talk in a group, he may volunteer to speak first to avoid the
anxiety.
Types of Crisis
❖ Maturational or Developmental Crisis
• Expected, predictable and internally motivated events in the normal course of life such as: ✔
Leaving home for the first time; Getting married
✔ Having a baby; Beginning a career
✔ Growth; Parenthood
• Unanticipated or sudden, unexpected, Unpredictable and externally motivated events that threaten the
individual's integrity such as:
✔ Death of a loved one
✔ Loss of a job
✔ Physical and emotional illness in the individual family or member; Car accident
Phases of a Crisis
1. Denial - Initial reaction
2. Increased Tension
• Person recognizes the presence of a crisis and continues to do activities of daily living
3. Disorganization
• Person is pre-occupied with the crisis and is unable to do activities of daily living
4. Attempts to Reorganize
• Individual mobilizes previous coping mechanisms
20 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE
NURSING*RADTECH*DENTISTRY*CRIMINOLOGY*MIDWIFERY*MEDTECH
LET*PSYCHOMET*RESPIRATORY THERAPY*CIVIL SERVICE*NAPOLCOM
NCLEX*DHA*HAAD* PROMETRIC* UK-CBT
CRISIS INTERVENTION
❖ A way of entering into the life situation of an individual, family, group, or community to help them mobilize their
resources and to decrease the effect of a crisis inducing stress
• Designed to assess the person's health status and promote problem- solving such as:
• Aim at dealing with the person's needs for empathetic understanding such as:
RAPE
❖ It is a crime of violence and humiliation of the victim expressed through sexual means
❖ It is the penetration of an act of sexual intercourse with a female against her will and without her consent,
whether her will is overcome by force, fear of force, drugs, or intoxicants
❖ It is also considered rape if the woman is incapable of exercising irrational judgment because of mental deficiency or
when she is below the age of consent.
❖ According to Republic Act 8353, it refers to the insertion of the penis into the mouth. vagina, anus of a victim ❖ It
is generally considered as an act of hostility, anger or violence
POWER RAPE
❖ The intent of the rapist is not to injure the victim but to command and master another person sexually ❖
The rapist has an insecure self-image and feelings of incompetence and inadequacy,
❖ The rape is the vehicle for expressing power and potency.
SADISTIC RAPE
❖ Involves brutality
❖ The use of bondage and torture is not an expression of anger but necessary for the rapist's sexual excitement ❖ The
assault is often eroticized and is sexually stimulating
❖ This is done to express erotic feelings
❖ The nurse should allow the woman to proceed at her own pace and not rush her through any interview or
examination
❖ Give as much control back to the victim as possible by allowing her to make decisions, when possible, about whom to call,
what to do next, what she would like done, etc.
❖ It is the victim's decision about whether or not to file charges and testify against the perpetrator and the victim must sign
consent forms before any photographs of hair and nail samples are taken for future evidence ❖ The priority in the care of a
rape victim is the preservation of evidence
❖ Prophylactic treatment for STDs is offered
Manifestations
• Display little eye contact
• Acts as deaf
• No fear of danger
• Low-dose Antipsychotic
❖ Tantrums
• Involves head-banging
• Provide safety
• Helmet
• Padded walls
❖ Communication
• All vowels
❖ Routines
• Provide consistency
• Family Therapy
❖ Common in boys
❖ Identified and diagnosed when the child begins preschool or school (before the age of 7)
• Neurologic impairment
• Early malnutrition
Risk Factors
• Family history of ADHD
• Gender (Male)
Clinical Manifestations
INATTENTIVE BEHAVIORS
Misses details
Makes careless mistakes
Has difficulty sustaining attention
Doesn't seem to listen
Dos not follow-through on chores
Has difficulty with organization
Avoids tasks requiring mental effort
Often loses necessary things
HYPERACTIVE BEHAVIOR
Fidgets
Often leaves seat (during a meal)
Runs or climbs excessively
Can’t play quietly
Is always on the go; driven
Talks excessively
Blurts out answers
Interrupts
Can’t wait for turn
Is intrusive with siblings/playmates
Treatment
DRUGS NURSING CONSIDERATIONS
• Allows break
4. Structured daily routine
• Establish a daily schedule
• Minimize changes
5. Nutrition
• Provide finger foods
6. Client/Family education and support
• Listen to parent’s feelings and frustration
MENTAL RETARDATION
❖ IQ less than 70
Mild 55 – 69 Educable
Moderate 40 – 54 Trainable
❖ Educable
❖ Trainable
❖ Close Supervision
Nursing Care
• Repetition
• Role modelling
• Writing
• Basic Arithmetic
ANXIETY
❖ Stage of uneasiness or discomfort experienced to varying degrees frequently coupled with doubts, fears, and
obsessions.
❖ Feeling of terror or dread; the most uncomfortable feeling a person can experience
The person may bolt and run aimlessly, often exposing himself
or herself to injury
PRIORITY NURSING DIAGNOSES FOR ANXIETY
❖ Ineffective individual coping
❖ Anxiety
❖ Administer medications
ANXIETY DISORDER
❖ Emotional illness characterized by fear, automatic nervous system symptoms and avoidance behavior ❖ Diagnosed when
anxiety no longer functions as a signal of danger or a motivation for needed change but become chronicand permeates
major portions of the person’s life, resulting in maladaptive behaviors and emotional instability
• Anxiety about or avoidance of places or situation from which escape might be difficult or help might be unavailable
Symptoms:
✔ Avoids being outside alone or at home alone
• Panic Disorder
• Panic attack
• It is the sudden onset of intense apprehension, fearfulness, or terror associated with feelings of impending doom
Symptoms: A discrete episode of panic lasting 15 to 30 minutes with four or more of the following:
• Palpitations • Chest pain or discomfort
• Sweating • Nausea
• Social Phobia
• It is characterized by anxiety provoked by certain types of social or performance situations, which of leads to
avoidance behavior
Symptoms
• Fear of embarrassment or inability to perform
Management
• Anti-anxiety medications
✔ Restlessness
✔ Easily fatigued
✔ Irritability
✔ Muscle tension
✔ Sleep disturbance
Management
• Buspirone (Buspar) and SSRI antidepressants
• It is the development of anxiety, dissociative, and other symptoms within 1 month of exposure to an extremely
traumatic stressor; it last 2 days to 4 weeks
Symptoms
• Exposure to traumatic events causing intense fear, helplessness, or horror, marked anxiety symptoms or increased
arousal;
• Significant distress or impaired functioning
✔ Derealisation
✔ Depersonalization
• It is characterized by the re-experiencing of an extremely traumatic events, avoidance of stimuli associated with the
event, numbing of responsiveness, and persistent increased arousal
Symptoms
• Flashbacks and nightmares
• Increased arousal (sleep disturbance, irritability or angry outbursts, difficulty concentrating, hypervigilance,
exaggerated startle response)
• Significant distress or impairment
Management
• Anti-anxiety Medication Diazepam ( Valium)
✔ Oxazepam (Serax)
✔ Chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
✔ Clorazepate dipotassium
✔ Alprazolam (Xanax)
• Anti-depressant Medications
• Group Therapy
• Instead of thinking , “My heart is pounding. I think I am going to die” the client thinks, “I can stand this. This just an
anxiety. It will go away”.
❖ Decatastrophizing
• Involves the therapist’s use of the questions to more realistic appraise the situation
• The therapist may ask: ‘What is the worst thing that could happen? Is that likely? Could you survive that? Is that as bad
as you imagine?”
❖ Thought-stopping
• The client uses thought stopping and distraction techniques to jolt himself from focusing on the negative
thoughts
• Techniques that can break the cycle of negative thoughts includes:
❖ Assertiveness Training
• Techniques help the person negotiate interpersonal situation and foster self-assurance
• They involve using “I” statement to identify feelings and to communicate concerns or the needs of others Example:
“I feel angry when you turn your back while I’m talking”, ‘I want to have five minutes of your time for an uninterrupted
conversation about something important
SPECIFIC PHOBIA
❖ Characterized by significant anxiety provoked by a specific feared object or situation which leads to avoidance
behavior.
Symptoms
• Marked anxiety response to the object or situation
Management
• Anti-anxiety Medications
• Systematic Desensitization
✔ The therapist progressive exposes the client to threatening object in a safe setting until the client’s
anxiety decreases
PERSONALITY
❖ Defined as an ingrained, enduring pattern of behaving and relating to self, other, and the environment; personality
includes perception, attitudes, and emotions.
CLUSTER A
• Uses the defense mechanism of projection, which is blaming other people, institutions or events for their own
difficulties
Nursing Interventions
• Approach these clients in a formal, business –like manner and refrain from chi-chat and jokes (serious and straight
forward approach)
• Involve the client in treatment planning
• Restricted affect and little, if any emotion; aloof and indifferent, appearing emotionally cold, uncaring, or
unfeeling
• Report no leisure or pleasurable activities because they rarely experience enjoyment
Nursing Interventions
• Focus in improved functioning of the client in the community
• Assist the client to find a case manager one who helps the client to obtain services and health care, manage
finances, etc.
• Nurse encourage clientto establish a daiy routine for hygiene and grooming
• Lying
• Thrill-seeking behaviors
• Consistent irresponsibility
Nursing Interventions
• Promote responsible behavior
• Limit setting
• Consistent adherence to rules and treatment plan\the nurse should not become angry or respond to the client harshly
or punitively
• Confrontation – technique designed to manage manipulative or deceptive behavior.
Example:
Nurse: “You’ve said you’re interested in learning to manage angry outbursts, but you’ve missed the last three group
meetings.”
Client: “Well, I can tell no one in the group likes me. Why should I bather?”
Nurse: “The group meetings are designed to help you and the others, but you can’t work on issues if you are not there.”
• Clients are overly concerned with impressing others with their appearance
• Dress and flirtatious behavior are not limited to social situations or relationships but also occur in occupation and
professional settings
Nursing Interventions
• It would be more acceptable to stand at least 2 feet away from them and to shake hands,
• Teaching social skills and role-playing those skills in a safe, non-threatening environment can help clients to gain
confidence in their ability to interact socially
• Provide factual feedback about behavior.
• She sets limits to rude or verbally abusive behavior and explains his or her expectations from the clients. •
Teach client any needed self-care skills
• The nurse can help them to explore positive self-aspects, positive responses from other, and possible reasons for self-
criticism
• Cognitive-restructuring techniques
OBSESSIONS COMPULSION
Nursing Interventions
• Encourage negotiation with others
EATING DISORDERS
ANOREXIA NERVOSA
• Body weight that is 85% less than expected for their age and height
Clinical Manifestations
• Fear of gaining weight • Limited spontaneity
Sub types:
❖ Binge eating
❖ Purging
• Compensatory behavior designed to eliminate food by means of self-induced vomiting or misuse of laxatives,
enemas and diuretics
Note: Some clients with anorexia do not binge but engage in purging behavior after ingesting small amounts of food
Treatment
❖ Focus on:
• Weight restoration
• Nutritional rehabilitation
• Rehydration
❖ Drugs
❖ Individual therapy
BULIMIA NERVOSA
❖ Eating disorder characterized by recurrent episode (at least twice a week for 3 months) of binge eating followed by
inappropriate compensatory behaviors to avoid weight gain such as purging, use of laxatives, diuretics, enemas, and
fasting.
❖ Weight usually in normal range, although some clients are overweight or underweight.
❖ Low-self-esteem
Clinical Manifestations
• Recurrent episodes of binge eating and purging
• Menstrual irregularities
• Dependence in laxatives
• Esophageal tears
Nursing Interventions
• Promote improved nutrition
• Drugs: desipramine (Norpramin), Imipramine (Tofranil), Amitriptyline (Elavil), Nortriptyline (Pamelor), Phenelzine (Nardil)
Paraphilias
❖ Group of psychosexual disorders characterized by unconventional sexual behaviors
• Sexual arousal elicited by inanimate objects (shoes, leather and rubber) or specific body parts (feet, hair) ❖
Autoerotic Asphyxia
• Constriction of the neck to enhance masturbation experience
❖ Sexual Masochism
❖ Transvestitism
Coercive Paraphilias
❖ Exhibitionism
• May be accompanied by arousal and masturbation either during or after the exposure
❖ Voyeurism
• Secret observation of an unsuspecting person (usually a woman) engaged in a private act (e.g.
undressing, having sex, etc.)
• Voyeur often masturbates during or after the viewing
❖ Frotteurism
❖ Pedophilia
❖ Urophilia
❖ Coprophilia
❖ Sadism
Nursing Interventions
• Diversional activities
• Limit-setting
• Behavior modification
SCHIZOPHRENIA
❖ Negative/soft Symptoms
Hallucination Alogia
Delusions Anhedonia
Ambivalence Apathy
Associative Looseness Blunted affect
Echopraxia Catatonia
General Manifestations
1. Perceptual changes
❖ Perceptions may either be heightened or blunted
• Ideas that are related to one another based on sound or rhyming rather than meaning.
Example: “I will take a pill if I go up to the hill but not if my name is Jill, I don’t want to kill.”
❖ Delusions
✔ Involve the client’s belief that “other” are planning to harm the client or are spying, following, ridiculing or
belittling the client in some way.
Example: The client may think that food has been poisoned or that rooms are bugged with listening devices.
• Grandiose Delusions
✔ Characterized by the client’s claim to association with famous people or celebrities, or the client’s belief that
he or she is famous or capable of great feats.
• Religious Delusions
✔ Often center around the second coming of Christ or another significant religious figure or prophet. Example: client claims
to be the Messiah or some prophet sent from God; believes that God communicates directly to him or her, or that he or she has
a “special” religious mission in life or special religious powers.
• Somatic Delusion
✔ Generally vague and unrealistic beliefs about the client’s health or bodily functions.
Examples: A male client may say that he is pregnant, or a client may report decaying intestines or worms in the brain.
✔ Involve the client’s belief that television broadcasts, music, or newspaper articles have special meaning for him or her.
Examples: The client may report that the president was speaking directly to him on a news broadcast or that special
messages are sent through newspaper articles.
3. Changes in Communication
[Link] Communication
B. Tangential Communication
[Link] Disorganization
✔ Responses are inappropriate to the situation
D. Thought Blocking
✔ Stopping abruptly in the middle of a sentence or train of thoughts
• A delusion belief that other can hear or know what the client is thinking
❖ Thought Insertion
• A delusional belief that others are taking the client’s thoughts away and the client is powerless to stop it. ❖
Neologisms
❖ Echolalia
❖ World salad
• If one parent has a bipolar these is 25% chance of transmission to the child
• Mood disorder is caused by a belief that one has no control over his environment.
❖ Biologic factors
• Mania is related to increased levels of norepinephrine while depression is related to low norepinephrine levels.
Precipitating Factor
• Major life events
• Decreased energy
2. Bipolar Disorder
❖ It is diagnosed when a Person's mood cycles between extremes of mania and depression
3. Mania
• It is a distinct period during which mood is abnormally and persistently elevated expansive or irritable •
Period lasts for 1 week
• At least 3 of the following symptoms
accompany the manic episode:
✔ Inflated self-esteem 'grandiosity
✔ Flight of ideas
✔ Distractibility
Hypomania
• Period of abnormally and persistently elevated expansive or irritable mood tasting 4 days and including three or four of
additional symptoms
• Difference: Hypomanic episodes do not impairthe person's ability to function and there are no psychotic features
(hallucinations & delusions)
• Less severe than mania
Mixed episode
• Also termed as rapid-cycling
• experiences both mania and depression nearly every day for at least 1 week.
✔ Other disorders that are classified as mood disorders but lacks symptoms that required for a bipolar or depressive
disorder:
❖ Dysthymic Disorder
• Characterized by at least 2 years of depressed mood for more days than with some additional less severe
symptoms that do not meet the criteria for a major depressive episode
❖ Cyclothymic Disorder
❖ Characterized by 2 years of numerous periods of both hypomanic symptoms that do not meet the criteria of
bipolar disorder
• Appetiteand carbohydratecravings
• Weight gain
• Interpersonal conflict beginning in the late autumn and a bating in spring and summer
Spring-onset
• Less common
❖ Postpartum Blues
• Peak in 3 to 7 days
• Disappear rapidlywithnomedical
Treatment
❖ Postpartum Depression
• Meets allthecriteria for a depressive episode with onset with. weeks of delivery
❖ Postpartum psychosis
• Begins with fatigue, sadness, emotional lability, poor memory, and confusion sod progressing to delusions &
hallucinations.
TREATMENT
❖ Lithium carbonate
• Can stabilized bipolar disorder by reducing the degree and frequency of cycling or eliminating manic episode •
Mechanism of action is unknown
• Works in the synapses to hasten destruction of catecholamines, inhibit neurotransmitter releases & decrease the
sensitive of postsynaptic receptors
• Crosses the blood-brain barrier and placenta
Toxicity Report: Severe nausea, vomiting diarrhea, muscle weakness & tremors
Management: Administration of Mannitol
Therapeutic Effects Take 10 -14 days before therapeutic effect becomes evident
Weight Monitor daily weights and the balance between intake and output and checking for
dependent edema
Other Information If there is too much water, lithium is diluted and the lithium level will be too low to be
therapeutic
Drinking too little amount of water or losing fluid through excessive sweating, vomiting or
diarrhe will increase the lithium level, which may result in toxicity
Nursing Intervention
• provide for client's physical safety and safety of those around the client
• Clients in the manic phase have little insight into their anger and agitation and how their behaviors affect others • Set
limits on clients behavior when needed and remind client to respect distances between self and others • Clarity the
meaning of client's communication
• Frequently provide finger foods that are high in calories and protein
• Nurse should handle behavior in a matter-ot tact approach and non-judgmental manner
• It is Important to treat clients with dignity ,us, s respect despite their Inappropriate behavior
• psychopharmacology
✔ Tricyclic Antidepressant
✔ MAOI
✔ SSRI
SOMATOFORM DISORDER
❖ Description: it can be characterized as the presence of physical symptoms that suggest a medical condition without a
demonstrable organic basis to account fully for them:
❖ Three Central Features:
• Physical complaints suggest major medical illness but have no demonstrable organic basis • Psychological factor and
conflicts seems important in initiating, exacerbating, and maintaining the symptoms. • Symptoms or magnified health
concerns are not under the client’s conscious control.
❖ Somatoform disorder:
⮚ Somatoform disorder- Characterized by multiple physical symptoms. It begins by 30 years of age, extends over
several years, and includes a combination of pain and gastrointestinal, sexual, and pseudo-neurologic symptoms.
SYMPTOMS OF SOMATIZATION DISORDER
Pain symptoms: complaints of headaches; pain in the abdomen, head, Joints, back, chest, rectum, pain during
urination, menstruation, or sexual intercourse
Gastrointestinal symptoms: nausea, bloating, vomiting (other than during pregnancy), diarrhea, or Intolerance of
several foods
Sexual symptoms: sexual Indifference, erectile or ejaculatory dysfunction, irregular menses, excessive menstrual
bleeding, vomiting through-out pregnancy
Pseudo-neurologic symptoms: conversion symptoms such as Impaired coordination or balance, paralysis or localized
weakness, difficulty swallowing or lump in throat, aphonia, urinary retention, hallucinations, loss of touch or pain
sensation, double vision, blindness, deafness, seizures; dissociative symptoms such as amnesia; or loss of consciousness
other than fainting
• Pain disorder- has the primary physical symptom of pain,which generally is unrelieved by analgesics and greatly
affected by psychological factors interms of onset,severity, exacerbation and maintenance.
• Hypochondriasis
✔ Disease conviction- is preoccupation with the fear that one has a serious disease
✔ It is thought that clients with this disorder misinterpret bodily sensations or functions.
✔ It is preoccupation with an imagined or exaggerated defect in physical appearance such as thinking one's nose is too
large or teeth are crooked and unattractive.
• Malingering
• Factitious disorder occurs when a person intentionally produces or feigns physical or psychological symptoms solely
to gain attentions.
✔ Munchausen’s syndrome- people with factitious disorder may even inflict injury to themselves to receive
attention
✔ Munchausen's by proxy- Occurs when a person inflicts illness or injury on someone else to gain the
attention of emergency medical personnel or to be a "hero" for saving the victim.
❖ Psychosocial Theories
• Internalization- people with somatoform disorders keep stress, anxiety, frustration inside rather than
expressing them outwardly.
• Somatization-clients express these internalized feelings and stress through physical symptoms • Both
internalization and somatization are unconscious defense mechanisms.
• Primary gains are the direct external benefits that being sick provides such as relief of anxiety, conflict, or
distress.
• Secondary gains are the internal or personal benefits received from others because one is sick such as
attention from family members
❖ Biologic Theories
• Clients cannot sort relevant from irrelevant stimuli and respond equally to both types.
• They may experience a normal body sensation such as peristalsis and attach a pathologic than a normal meaning to it
• This amplified sensory awareness causes the person toexperience somatic sensations as more intense, noxious, and
disturbing
❖ Management:
• The health care provider must show empathy and sensitivity to the clients physical complaints • A trusting
relationship will help to ensure that clients stay with and receive care from one provider instead of "doctor shopping.'
• The nurse should never try to confront the client about the origin of these symptoms until the client has learned other
coping strategies.
• Selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors are used most commonly for the accompanying depression ✔
Fluoxetine (Prozac)
✔ Sertraline (Zoloft)
✔ Paroxetine (Paxil)
Pain
• Pain management such as visual imaging and relaxation.
• Services such as physical therapy to maintain and build muscle tone help to improve functional abilities. • Providers
should avoid prescribing and administering narcotic analgesics to these clients because of the risk of dependence or
abuse
• Clients can use non-steroidal anti-inflammatoryagents to help reduce pain. Involvement in therapy groups is
beneficial for some people with somatoform disorders
Health teaching:
• Establish a daily routine.
• Keep journal
• Limit time spent on physical complaints
• Coping strategies
• Emotion-focused coping strategies such as relaxation techniques, deep breathing, guided imagery, and distraction •
Problem-focused coping strategies such as problem-solving strategies and role playing
• Emotion-focused coping strategies,which help clients relax and reduce feeling of stress ✔
Progressive relaxation
✔ Deep breathing
✔ Guided imagery
✔ Distractions
❖ Problem-focused coping strategies: which help to resolve or change a client’s behavior and situation or manage life
stressor
✔ Problem-solving method
Substance Abuse
❖ Terminologies:
• Withdrawal syndrome- refers to the negativepsychological and physical reactions that occur when use of a
substance abuse ceases or dramatically decreases
• Detoxification- the process of safely withdrawing from a substance
• Tolerance break- after continued heavy drinking, the person experiences intoxication in a very small amount of the
substance (alcohol).
• Spontaneous remission- also known as natural recovery. Some people with alcohol problems can modify or quit
drinking on theirownwithouta treatment program
❖ Biological factors
• Generic/ hereditary- children of alcoholic parents are at higher risk for developing alcoholism and drug
dependence than are children of non-alcoholicparents.
• Distribution of the substance throughout the brain alter the balance of neurotransmitter that modulate
pleasure, pain, and reward responses
❖ Psychologic factors
• Inconsistency in the parent’s behavior, poor role modelling, and lack of nurturing pave the way for the child to
adopt a similar style of maladaptive coping, stormy relationship, and substance abuse.
• Cultural factors, social attitudes, peer behaviors, laws, cost, and availability all influence initial and continued use of
substance.
ALCOHOLISM
❖ Intoxication:
• Clinical manifestations
✔ Slurred speech
✔ Unsteady gait
✔ Lack of coordination
✔ Blackout
• Treatment:
✔ Gastric lavage
✔ Dialysis
39 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE
NURSING*RADTECH*DENTISTRY*CRIMINOLOGY*MIDWIFERY*MEDTECH
LET*PSYCHOMET*RESPIRATORY THERAPY*CIVIL SERVICE*NAPOLCOM
NCLEX*DHA*HAAD* PROMETRIC* UK-CBT
✔ Sweating
✔ Insomnia
✔ Anxiety
✔ Nausea or vomiting
⮚ Lorazepam (Ativan),
⮚ Chlordiazepoxide (Librium)
⮚ Diazepam (Valium).
• Detoxification:
✔ Disulfiram- Antabuse
• Wernicke's encephalopathy
• Korsakoff's psychosis
• Pancreatitis
• Esophagitis
• Hepatitis
• Cirrhosis
• Leukopenia
• Thrombocytopenia
• Ascites
• Barbiturates
• Nonbarbiturate
• Hypnotics
• Anxiolytics
❖ Intoxication:
• Clinical manifestations:
✔ Slurred speech
✔ Lack of coordination
✔ unsteady gait
✔ Labile mood
✔ rarely fatal
❖ Barbiturates
✔ Can be lethal
✔ Coma
✔ Respiratory arrest
✔ Cardiac failure
✔ Death
❖ Treatment:
✔ Benzodiazepines:
⮚ Gastric lavage
⮚ Ingestion of activated
⮚ charcoal
⮚ Saline cathartic
⮚ Dialysis.
✔ Barbiturates:
⮚ Lavage or dialysis
• Clinical manifestations:
✔ Hand tremors
✔ Insomnia
✔ Anxiety
✔ Nausea
✔ Psychomotor agitation
✔ Seizures
✔ Hallucinations
❖ Detoxification:
• Managed medically by tapering the amount of the drug the client receives over a period of days or weeks, •
Tapering, or administering decreasing doses of a medication, is essential with barbiturates to prevent coma and
death that willoccur if the drug is stopped abruptly.
STIMULANTS (AMPHETAMINE, COCAINE AND OTHERS)
• Stimulants are drugs that stimulate or excite the central nervous system.
• Amphetamines ("uppers") were popular in the past;they were used by people who wanted to lose weight or to stay awake
• Cocaineanillegal drug with virtually no clinical use in medicine, is highly addictive and a popular recreational drug
because of the intense and immediate feeling of euphoria it produces.
• Methamphetamine is particularly dangerous. It is highly addictive and causes psychotic behavior. Brain damage related
to its use is frequent, primarily as a result of the substances used to make it.
• Intoxication and overdosage
Clinical Manifestation
✔ High or euphoric feeling
✔ Hyperactivity
✔ Hypervigilance
✔ Talkativeness
✔ Anxiety
✔ Grandiosity
✔ Hallucinations
✔ Anger
✔ Fighting
41 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE
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LET*PSYCHOMET*RESPIRATORY THERAPY*CIVIL SERVICE*NAPOLCOM
NCLEX*DHA*HAAD* PROMETRIC* UK-CBT
✔ Impaired judgment
✔ Tachycardia
✔ Dilated pupils, perspiration or chills, nausea, chest pain, confusion, and cardiac dysrhythmias. ✔
Overdoses of stimulants can result in seizures and coma ; deaths
• Withdrawal from stimulants occurs within a few hours to several days after cessation of the drug and is not life
threatening.
• Marked dysphoria is the primary symptom andisaccompaniedby fatigue, vivid and unpleasant dreams, insomniaor
hypersomnia, increased appetite, and psychomotor retardation or agitation
• Marked withdrawal symptoms are referred to as "crashing symptoms;"
• The person may experience depressive symptoms including suicidal ideation for several days. •
Stimulant withdrawal is not treated Pharmacologically.
Cannabis (Marijuana)
❖ Cannabis sativa is the hemp plant that is widely cultivated for its fiber used to make rope and cloth and for oil from its
seeds.
❖ Marijuanarefers tothe upper leaves, floweringtops,and stems of the plant; hashish is the dried resinous exudate from the
leaves of the female plant.
❖ Cannabis is most often smoked in cigarettes (“joints”), but it can be eaten.
❖ Effects:
✔ Inappropriate laughter
✔ Anxiety
✔ Dysphoria
✔ Social withdrawal
✔ Increased appetite
✔ Dry mouth
✔ Hypotension
✔ Delirium
Opioids
❖ Populardrugsofabusebecausethey desensitize the user to both physiologic and psychological pain and induce a sense of
euphoria and well being
❖ Opioids:
• Morphine
• Meperidine (Demerol)
• Codeine
• Hydromorphone
42 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE
NURSING*RADTECH*DENTISTRY*CRIMINOLOGY*MIDWIFERY*MEDTECH
LET*PSYCHOMET*RESPIRATORY THERAPY*CIVIL SERVICE*NAPOLCOM
NCLEX*DHA*HAAD* PROMETRIC* UK-CBT
• Oxycodone
• Methadone
• Oxymorphone
• Hydrocodone
• Propoxyphene
• Heroin
• Normethadone
❖ Intoxication
• Clinical manifestation
✔ Euphoric feeling
✔ Apathy
✔ Lethargy
✔ Listlessness
✔ Impaired judgement
✔ Constricted pupils
✔ Drowsiness
✔ Slurred speech
✔ Coma
✔ Respiratory depression
✔ Papillary constriction
✔ Unconsciousness
✔ Death
• Treatment
⮚ An opioid antagonist
• Clinical Manifestations:
✔ Anxiety
✔ Restlessness
✔ Nausea
✔ Vomiting
✔ Dysphoria
✔ Lacrimation
✔ Rhinorrhea
✔ Sweating
✔ Diarrhea
✔ Yawning
✔ Fever
✔ Insomnia.
• Treatment:
Hallucinogens
❖ Substances that distort the user's perception of reality and produce symptoms similar to psychosis including
hallucinations (usually visual) and depersonalization.
❖ Examples of hallucinogens:
• Mescaline
• Psilocybin
• Lysergic acid
• Clinical Manifestations
✔ Anxiety
✔ Depression
✔ Paranoid ideation
✔ Ideas of reference
✔ Potentially dangerous behavior such as jumping out a window in the belief that one can fly. ✔
Sweating
✔ Tachycardia
✔ Palpitations
✔ Blurred vision
✔ Tremors
✔ Lack of coordination
✔ Belligerence
✔ Aggression
✔ Impulsivity
✔ Unpredictable behavior
• Treatment:
✔ These drugs are not a direct cause of death although fatalities have occurred from related accidents,
aggression and suicide
✔ Treatment is supportive.
✔ Physical restraints
✔ Cooling devices such as a hyperthermia blanket are used and mechanical ventilation is used to support
respirations
✔ No withdrawal syndrome has been identified for hallucinogens,although some people have reported a craving for the
drug.
✔ Hallucinogens can produce flashbacks, which are transientrecurrencesof perceptual disturbances
Inhalants
❖ Diverse group of drugs including anesthetics, nitrates, and organic solvents that are inhaled for their effects. ❖
Inhalants can cause significant brain damage, peripheral nervous system damage, and liver disease.
❖ Inhalants:
• Gasoline
• Glue
• Paint thinner
• Spray paint
• Cleaners
• Correction fluid
• Esters
• Ketones
• Glycols
❖ Intoxication
• Clinical manifestations:
✔ Dizziness
✔ Nystagmus,
✔ Lack of coordination
✔ Slurred speech
✔ Unsteady gait,
✔ Tremors
✔ Muscle weakness
✔ Blurred vision
✔ Belligerence
✔ Aggression
✔ Apathy
✔ Impaired judgment
✔ Inability to function.
• Acute toxicity:
✔ Anoxia
✔ Respiratory depression
✔ Vagal stimulation
✔ Dysrhythmias
• Treatment
✔ Supporting respiratory and cardiac functioning until the substance is removed from the body ✔
There are no antidotes or specific medications to treat inhalants toxicity.
• Persistent dementia
MANAGEMENT
❖ Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)
• Self-help group developed the 12 step program model for recovery which is based on the philosophy that total
abstinence is essential and that alcoholics need help and support of others to maintain sobriety. ❖ AA meetings
✔ Narcotics Anonymous
❖ Nursing Alert:
• Alcohol
✔ VitaminB1 (thiamine) often is prescribed to prevent or to treat Wernicke's syndrome and Korsakoff's
syndrome,which are neurologic conditions thatcan result from heavy alcohol use.
✔ Cyanocobalamin (Vitamin B12) and folic acid often are prescribed for client with nutritional deficiencies. ✔
Disulfiram (Antabuse) may be prescribed to help to deter clients from drinking.
⮚ If aclient taking disulfiram drinks alcohol, a severe adverse reaction occurs:
o Flushing
o Throbbing headache
o Sweating
o Nausea and vomiting
o Severe hypotension
45 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE
NURSING*RADTECH*DENTISTRY*CRIMINOLOGY*MIDWIFERY*MEDTECH
LET*PSYCHOMET*RESPIRATORY THERAPY*CIVIL SERVICE*NAPOLCOM
NCLEX*DHA*HAAD* PROMETRIC* UK-CBT
o Confusion
o Coma
o Death
• Opiates
✔ Methadone
⮚ Meets the physical need for opiates but does not produce cravings for more
✔ Levomethadyl
✔ Naltrexone (ReVia)
⮚ Negating the effects of using more opioids used in the same manner as methadone.
✔ Clonidine (Catapres)
⮚ It is given to clients with opiate dependence to suppress some effects of withdrawal or abstinence ⮚ It is most
effective against nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea but produces modest relief from muscle aches, anxiety, and
restlessness
✔ Ondansetron (Zofran)
⮚ A 5-HT3 antagonist that blocks the vagal stimulation effects of serotonin inthe small intestine ⮚ It is
used as an antiemetic.
DISSOCIATIVE DISORDERS
⮚ Dissociation-is a subconscious defense mechanism that helps a person protect is or her emotional self from
recognizing the full effects of some horrific or traumatic event by allowing the mind to forget or remove itself from
the painful situation or memory.
⮚ Dissociative disorders-essential feature of a disruptionintheusually integrated functions of consciousness,
memory,identity or environmental perception
TYPES OF DISSOCIATIVE DISORDER
❖ Dissociative amnesia
• The client cannot remember important personal information usually of a traumatic or stressful nature.
❖ Dissociative fugue
• The client has episodes of suddenly leaving the home or place of work without any explanation, traveling to
another city,and being unable to remember his or her past or identity. He or she may assume a new identity
• The client displays two or more distinct identities or personality states that recurrently take control of his or her
behavior.
• This is accompanied by the inability to recall important personal information.
❖ Depersonalization disorder
• The client has a persistent or recurrent feeling of being detached from his or her mental processes or body. • Thisis
accompanied by intact reality testing
• The clientis not psychotic or out of touch with reality.
ASSESSMENT FINDINGS
❖ General Appearance and Motor Behavior
• Appears hyperalert and reacts to even small environmental noises with a startle response. • He
or she may be very uncomfortable if the nurse is too close physically
• The client may appearanxious or agitated and may have difficulty sitting still
❖ Thought process
❖ Self-concept
• Clients will have low self-esteem. They may believe they are bad people who somehow deserve or provoke the abuse.
❖ Physiologic signs
• Clients use alcohol or other drugs to attempt to sleep or to blot out intrusive thoughts or memories
MANAGEMENT
❖ Pharmacologic management:
• Paroxetine (Paxil)
• Sertraline (Zoloft)
❖ Psychotherapy:
❖ Nursing Management:
• Help the client learn to go to a safe place during destructive thoughts and impulses so that he or she can calm down
and wait until they pass
• Grounding techniques remind the client that he or she is in the present, as an adult and is safe. • Getting
the client to standand walk around helps to dispel the dissociative or flashback experience.
47 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE
NURSING*RADTECH*DENTISTRY*CRIMINOLOGY*MIDWIFERY*MEDTECH
LET*PSYCHOMET*RESPIRATORY THERAPY*CIVIL SERVICE*NAPOLCOM
NCLEX*DHA*HAAD* PROMETRIC* UK-CBT
• The nurse encourages the client to write down feelings throughout the day at specified intervals • Deep
breathing and relaxation
• Focus on sensory information or stimuli in the environment
✔ Physical exercise
✔ Listening to music
✔ Talking to others,
• Often it is useful to view the client as a survivor of trauma or abuse rather than a victim.
48 TOPRANK REVIEW ACADEMY- NURSING MODULE