A patient performs ritualistic hand washing. What should the nurse do to help the patient develop more effective coping strategies?
- A. Allow the patient to set a hand-washing schedule.
- B. Encourage the patient to participate in social activities.
- C. Encourage the patient to discuss hand-washing routines.
- D. Focus on the patient's symptoms rather than on the patient.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Because patients diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder become overly involved in rituals, promoting involvement with other people and activities is necessary to improve the patient's coping strategies. Daily activities prevent the constant focus on anxiety and its symptoms. The other interventions focus on the compulsive symptom.
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A supervisor assigns a worker a new project. The worker initially agrees but feels resentful. The next day, when asked about the project, the worker says, 'I've been working on other things.' When asked 4 hours later, the worker says, 'Someone else was using the copier, so I couldn't finish it.' The worker's behavior demonstrates the use of what mechanism?
- A. Acting out
- B. Projection
- C. Suppression
- D. Passive aggression
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: A passive-aggressive person deals with emotional conflict by indirectly expressing aggression toward others. Compliance on the surface masks covert resistance. Resistance is expressed through procrastination, inefficiency, and stubbornness in response to assigned tasks. Acting out refers to behavioral expression of conflict. Projection is a form of blaming. Suppression is the conscious denial of a disturbing situation or feeling.
A patient tells the nurse, 'I wanted my health care provider to prescribe diazepam for my anxiety disorder, but buspirone was prescribed instead. Why?' The nurse's reply should be based on the knowledge of which characteristic of buspirone?
- A. It does not produce blood dyscrasias.
- B. It is not known to cause dependence.
- C. It can be administered as needed.
- D. It is faster acting than diazepam.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Buspirone is considered effective in the long-term management of anxiety because it is not habituating. Because it is long acting, buspirone is not valuable as an as-needed or as a fast-acting medication. The fact that buspirone does not produce blood dyscrasias is less relevant in the decision to prescribe buspirone.
Two staff nurses applied for promotion to nurse manager. Initially, the nurse not promoted had feelings of loss but then became supportive of the new manager by helping make the transition smooth and encouraging others. Which term best describes the nurse's response?
- A. Altruism
- B. Sublimation
- C. Suppression
- D. Passive aggression
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Altruism is the mechanism by which an individual deals with emotional conflict by meeting the needs of others and vicariously receiving gratification from the responses of others. The nurse's reaction is conscious, not unconscious. No evidence of aggression is exhibited, and no evidence of conscious denial of the situation exists. Passive aggression occurs when an individual deals with emotional conflict by indirectly and unassertively expressing aggression toward others.
A person has minor physical injuries after an automobile accident. The person is unable to focus and says, 'I feel like something awful is going to happen.' This person has nausea, dizziness, tachycardia, and hyperventilation. What is this person's level of anxiety?
- A. Mild
- B. Moderate
- C. Severe
- D. Panic
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The person whose anxiety is severe is unable to solve problems and may have a poor grasp of what is happening in the environment. Somatic symptoms such as those described are usually present. The individual with mild anxiety is only mildly uncomfortable and may even find his or her performance enhanced. The individual with moderate anxiety grasps less information about a situation and has some difficulty with problem solving. The individual in panic-level anxiety demonstrates significantly disturbed behavior and may lose touch with reality.
Which assessment questions are most relevant to ask a patient with possible obsessive-compulsive disorder?
- A. Have you been a victim of a crime or seen someone badly injured or killed?
- B. Are there certain social situations that cause you to feel especially uncomfortable?
- C. Do you have to do things in a certain way to feel comfortable?
- D. Is it difficult to keep certain thoughts out of awareness?
- E. Do you do certain things over and over again?
Correct Answer: C,D,E
Rationale: The correct questions refer to obsessive thinking and compulsive behaviors. The incorrect responses are more pertinent to a patient with suspected posttraumatic stress disorder or with suspected social anxiety disorder (social phobia).
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