Chapter 34- Basic Concepts of Mental health
crisis intervention goals
1. decrease emotional stress 2. assist the victim to organize and mobilize resources 3. return to pre-crisis status or a higher functional level
retired school teacher, compiled surveys that lead to the development of mental hospitals throughout the US.
Dorothea Dix
Conversion
Emotional conflicts are turned into a physical symptom, which provides the individual with some sort of benefit (secondary gain)
the "Lady of the Lamp."
Florence Nightingale
The nurse who is credited as being the first psychiatric nurse is:
Linda Richards
a nurse educator and clinical specialist in psychiatric-mental health nursing who was appointed to the President's commission in 1978.
Martha Mitchell
18th century English Quaker who advocated humane care and built an asylum to reflect a household was
William Tukes
rationalization
a process of constructing plausible reasons to explain and justify one's behavior. The person denies actual thoughts and justifies actions by giving untrue, but seemingly more acceptable, reasons for the behavior
introjection
a quality or attribute of another is internalized and becomes part of the individual.
The term that best describes the external manifestation of inner feelings or emotions and is often reflected by one's facial expressions is:
affect
Compensation
an individual makes up for a "deficency" in one area by excelling in or emphasizing another area
suppression
an intentional (conscious) exlusion of painful thoughts, experiences, or impulses (some don't consider this a defense mechanism)
projection
attributing to other characteristics that the person does not want to admit possessing. Blaming personal shortcomings on someone else
regression
behavior, thoughts, or feelings used at an earlier stage of development are exhibited
"Self" is a complex concept compromising four distinct parts that influence behavior. The part that includes feeling about the way one's body functions is:
body image
threats to physical integrity are
decreased ability to perform activities of daily living, impending physiologic disability; surgery, diagnosis of a life-threatening disorder, pain, infection, trauma
behaviors common with illness
denial, anxiety, shock, anger, withdrawal
Displacement
emotions are expressed toward someone or something other than the actual source of the emotion, unconsciously, the individual does not feel safe expressing the feelings directly
severe anxiety
experiences a feeling of impending danger perceptual field narrows significantly and becomes distorted communication possibly distorted and difficult to understand feels fatigued changes in vitals potentially evident on assessment
panic
feeling of extreme terror possibly becomes immobilized reality is distorted personality will potentially disintegrate further has potential to cause harm to self and others
moderate anxiety
feels tension perception has decreased remains alert, but only to specific info perhaps prone to arguing, teasing or complaining physical signs and symptoms often appear; headache, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, low back pain and increased vitals
id
functions on a primitive level and aims primarily at experiencing pleasure and avoiding pain
Part of the personality
id, ego, supergo
Nursing diagnoses for psychiatric- Mental health nursing
impaired adjustment, verbal communication, social interaction, anxiety; disturbed body image and personality identity; ineffective coping, denial, role performance, sexual patterns, sleep patterns; decisional conflict; interrupted family process; fear; grieving; hopelessness; risk for situational low self-esteem and spiritual distress
identification
individual incorporates a characteristic (thought and behavior) of another individual or group. The individual does not give up personal identity
ego
integrate and mediate between the self and the rest of the environment
stressor
is a situation, activity, or event that produces stress
threats to self-esteem and insults to the identity are
loss of significant relationships, loss of spouse, difficulty at work, loss of job, change in jobs, relocation to new home
levels of anxiety
mild, moderate, severe, panic
superego
moralistic censoring force
stress
nonspecific response of the body to any demand made on it
organizing principle of the self; it is the "I."
personal identitiy
Denail
reality is denied: it does not exist
expected behavior of an individual in a social position.
role position
assessment one makes about self worth.
self assessment
dissociation
separation and detachment of emotional significance and affect from an idea or situation
mild anxiety
slight increase in vitals and in awareness of danger able to think and make connections; heightened awareness is ready of action motivation is increased
reaction formation
the conscious behavior is completely opposite to the unconscious process
sublmation
the discharge of sexual or aggressive energy and impulses in socially acceptable way
repression
the unconscious process of barring from conscious though of painful, disagreeable, thoughts, experiences, and or impulses
events that have the ability to precipitate feelings of anxiety are
threats to physical integrity and threats to self-esteem and insults to the identity