During the admission assessment to the mental health unit, a client reports that the people at the office, where the client works, are antagonistic and the client is thinking of shooting the supervisor. The client asks the nurse not to reveal this to anyone else. The nurse immediately notifies the client's therapist and other team members of the client's thoughts. The therapist then calls the client's supervisor and shares the client's thoughts about shooting the supervisor. Which outcome is best based on the action of the nurse?
- A. The nurse is reprimanded for divulging confidential patient information without obtaining informed consent
- B. Both the nurse and therapist are reprimanded for divulging confidential patient information to others
- C. The nurse and therapist will be asked to educate other team members on appropriate sharing of client information
- D. The therapist is reprimanded for divulging confidential patient information without obtaining consent
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The nurse appropriately shared the threat with the team to ensure safety, but the therapist's disclosure to the supervisor may breach confidentiality. Educating team members on appropriate information sharing balances safety and privacy. Reprimands are less constructive unless clear violations occurred.
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A male client tells the nurse that he has an IQ of 400+ and is a genius and an inventor. He also reports that he is married to a female movie star and thinks that his brother wants a sexual relationship with her. Which is the priority nursing problem for admission to the psychiatric unit?
- A. Ineffective sexual patterns
- B. Disturbed sensory perception
- C. Compromised family coping
- D. Impaired environmental interpretation
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The client's delusions (e.g., being married to a movie star, brother's intentions) indicate disturbed sensory perception, suggestive of psychosis, which is the priority. Ineffective sexual patterns are not directly indicated. Family coping may be secondary. Impaired environmental interpretation is too broad.
A client who has agoraphobia is beginning desensitization with the therapist, and the nurse is reinforcing the process. Which intervention has the highest priority for this client's plan of care?
- A. Establish trust by providing a calm, safe environment
- B. Encourage deep breathing when anxiety escalates in a crowd
- C. Progressively expose the client to larger crowds
- D. Encourage substitution of positive thoughts for negative ones
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Establishing trust through a calm, safe environment is foundational for effective desensitization in agoraphobia, supporting the client's sense of security. Deep breathing and positive thoughts are secondary. Progressive exposure comes after trust is established.
The nurse observes a client with a history of psychosis repeatedly looking to the side and mumbling responses to no one present in that direction. Which comment is best for the nurse to make?
- A. You appear to be speaking with someone
- B. Let's talk about the next time this happens
- C. You need to be calm and focus on something else
- D. The voices you are hearing are not real
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: This comment acknowledges the client's behavior without judgment, validating their experience and encouraging further discussion. Focusing on the future, redirecting, or denying the voices may not be therapeutic and could invalidate the client's reality.
The nurse notes that a client with a history of self-mutilation has increased body tension and is pacing in the hallway. Which nursing intervention is most important at this time?
- A. Alert the assigned staff to closely monitor client and intervene as needed to reduce risk of self-mutilation
- B. Provide the client time alone in the client's room to reduce external stimulation and promote relaxation
- C. Give the client firm, consistent expectations that self-mutilating behaviors are unacceptable and will not be allowed
- D. Complete a thorough room search to ensure the client does not have access to objects that can be used for self-harm
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Alerting staff to monitor the client closely addresses the immediate risk of self-harm indicated by increased tension and pacing. Time alone may increase risk. Setting expectations is important but not immediate. Room searches are preventive but not the priority during acute distress.
History and physical
The client is a 19-year-old male who is in the emergency room for a leg injury. He states he was returning to his dorm from a party and fell about 5 feet (1.5 meters) into a small ravine on campus.
The client states that he drinks socially and takes no medications for any health condition
In order to help the client disclose a situation that is upsetting to him, what therapeutic communication tools could the nurse use? Select all that apply.
- A. Wait until the client is completely calm
- B. Ask difficult questions first to get them out of the way
- C. Use silence as a tool
- D. Speak with the client in private
- E. Observe nonverbal behavior and react accordingly
- F. Ask several questions in a row
Correct Answer: A,C,D,E
Rationale: A: Waiting until the client is calm fosters a safe environment. C: Silence allows the client time to process thoughts. D: Privacy ensures confidentiality and comfort. E: Observing nonverbal behavior provides emotional cues. B: Difficult questions first may increase anxiety. F: Multiple questions can overwhelm the client.
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