Test Bank for Psychiatric Nursing: Contemporary Practice - Caring for Persons With Co-occurring Mental Disorders Related

Review Test Bank for Psychiatric Nursing: Contemporary Practice - Caring for Persons With Co-occurring Mental Disorders related questions and content

A nurse is teaching a group of hospitalized clients who have co-occurring disorders involving cognitive disorders and alcoholism about the relapse cycle. Which statement would the nurse most likely include during this teaching session?

  • A. After you are discharged, there is a tendency to use alcohol rather than your prescribed medications to self-medicate your psychiatric symptoms. This allows your psychiatric symptoms to surface again, and they, in turn, lead to rehospitalization. Your symptoms are again controlled with medications until you are discharged, and the cycle starts all over again.
  • B. Your alcoholism causes you to hallucinate, and you need to take prescribed medications to control the hallucinations. When you try to stop drinking and stay abstinent, your hallucinations disappear; consequently, you stop taking your prescribed medications because they?re gone. Then you celebrate with alcohol, and this triggers a relapse; the alcoholism causes hallucinations, and the whole thing starts over again.
  • C. Your dependence on alcohol and your psychiatric illness are unrelated. Experiencing disturbing thoughts does not cause alcoholism, and alcoholism does not cause your disturbing thoughts. It all boils down to medication compliance.
  • D. The cycle is triggered by repeated attempts to stop drinking. Without the levels of alcohol your system has come to tolerate, you begin to develop psychiatric symptoms. Then you have to be hospitalized and treated for your psychosis again. Everything is fine until the next time you try to stop drinking, and then the cycle repeats itself.
Correct Answer: A

Rationale: Option A accurately describes the relapse cycle in co-occurring disorders, where clients use alcohol to self-medicate psychiatric symptoms, leading to symptom recurrence, rehospitalization, and repeated cycles due to medication non-adherence. Option B incorrectly ties alcoholism directly to hallucinations, option C oversimplifies the relationship, and option D misattributes psychiatric symptoms to alcohol withdrawal.