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2025 Mental Health Nursing Exam 1 Practice Test – COMPREHENSIVE FINAL PREP: VERIFIED QUESTIONS & EXPERT ANSWERS ULTIMATE EXAM PASS PACK – LATEST 2026/2027 UPDATES CERTIFIED TESTBANK: REAL QUESTIONS, ANSWERS, AND EXPLANATIONS

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A nurse and patient discuss a problem the patient has kept secret for many years. Afterward, the patient says, "I feel so relieved that I finally told somebody." Which term best describes the patient's feeling? • A. Catharsis • B. Superego • C. Cognitive distortion • D. Counter-transference Rationale: Catharsis represents the therapeutic discharge, venting, or release of deeply repressed emotions, traditionally referred to in early psychodynamic medicine as the "talking cure" or "getting things off one's chest." The superego represents the moral component of personality, cognitive distortions are irrational thought patterns, and counter-transference refers to the nurse's unconscious emotional response to the patient. 2. Candidacy for Brief Psychodynamic Therapy Which patient is the best candidate for brief psychodynamic therapy? • A. An accountant with a loving family and successful career who was involved in a short extramarital affair • B. An adult with a long history of major depression who was charged with driving under the influence (DUI) • C. A woman with a history of borderline personality disorder who recently cut both wrists • D. An adult male recently diagnosed with anorexia nervosa Rationale: The ideal candidates for brief psychodynamic therapy are well-functioning, introspective, highly motivated individuals (sometimes called the "worried well") who exhibit a clearly defined, isolated area of emotional conflict. Patients with active psychoses, severe personality disorders (such as borderline personality disorder), active self-harm, severe character disorders, or severe unmanaged major depressions are poor candidates for this specific model. 3. Patient Expectations in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) [Select all that apply] A patient states, "I'm starting cognitive-behavioral therapy. What can I expect from the sessions?" Which responses by the nurse would be appropriate? • A. "The therapist will be active and questioning." • B. "You will be given some homework assignments." • C. "The therapist will ask you to describe your dreams." • D. "The therapist will help you look at your ideas and beliefs about yourself." • E. "The goal is to increase subjectivity about thoughts that govern your behavior." Rationale: Cognitive-behavioral therapy is highly structured, goal-directed, and active. Therapists ask targeted questions to help patients challenge and reality-test automatic thoughts and core beliefs (A, D). Homework assignments are routinely utilized to reinforce adaptive behaviors outside of sessions (B). Dream analysis belongs to psychoanalysis, and the goal of CBT is to increase objectivity (not subjectivity) regarding cognitions. 4. Successful Resolution of Erikson's Late Adulthood Stage [Select all that apply] Which comments by an older adult best indicate successful completion of their developmental task? • A. "I am proud of my children's successes in life." • B. "I should have given to community charities more often." • C. "My relationship with my father made life more difficult for me." • D. "My experiences in the war helped me appreciate the meaning of life." • E. "I often wonder what would have happened if I had chosen a different career." Rationale: The developmental task for older adults (65+ years) according to Erikson is Integrity vs. Despair. Expressing fulfillment and pride in one’s legacy (A) or demonstrating wisdom and meaning derived from past life struggles (D) marks successful ego integrity. Expressing deep regrets, unresolved blame, or lingering self-doubt points to despair. 5. Identifying Characteristics of Self-Actualization [Select all that apply] Which comments by an adult best indicate self-actualization? • A. "I am content with a good book." • B. "I often wonder if I chose the right career." • C. "Sometimes I think about how my parents would have handled problems." • D. "It's important for our country to provide basic health care services for everyone." • E. "When I was lost at sea for 2 days, I gained an understanding of what is important." Rationale: According to Maslow, self-actualized individuals exhibit traits such as an appreciation for solitude/privacy (A), a deeply rooted democratic worldview regarding human rights and welfare (D), and profound growth or clarity following peak experiences (E). Self-doubt, persistent second-guessing, and defensive or external dependencies are inconsistent with selfactualization. 6. Distinguishing the Art vs. Science of Nursing [Select all that apply] Which activities represent the art of nursing? • A. Administering medications on time to a group of patients • B. Listening to a new widow grieve her husband's death • C. Helping a patient obtain groceries from a food bank • D. Teaching a patient about a new medication • E. Holding the hand of a frightened patient Rationale: The art of nursing is anchored in active presence, compassion, relational care, and patient advocacy (B, C, E). The science of nursing involves the technical application of clinical knowledge, pathophysiology, pharmacology, objective instruction, and safety-critical execution (A, D). 7. Therapeutic Factors: Interpersonal Learning A patient tells members of a therapy group, "I hear voices saying my doctor is poisoning me." Another patient replies, "I used to hear voices too. They sounded real, but I found out later they were not. The voices you hear are not real either." Which therapeutic factor is exemplified in this interchange? • A. Catharsis • B. Universality • C. Imitative behavior • D. Interpersonal learning Rationale: Through interpersonal learning, group members gain valuable cognitive insight into their own psychiatric symptoms and reality testing by interacting with and receiving direct feedback from fellow peers. Universality differs slightly by focusing on the broader, comforting relief that "I am not alone in my suffering." 8. Establishing Group Norms for Mutual Respect A leader plans to start a new self-esteem building group. Which intervention would be most helpful for assuring mutual respect within the group? • A. Describe the importance of mutual respect in the first session and make it a group norm. • B. Exclude potential members whose behavior suggests they are likely to be disrespectful. • C. Give members a brochure describing the purpose, norms, and expectations of the group. • D. Explain that mutual respect is expected and confront those who are not respectful. Rationale: Proactively articulating the functional benefit of mutual respect during the orientation phase establishes it as an explicit group norm from the very beginning. Handing out brochures is too passive, excluding members based on assumed behavior cuts off therapeutic access prematurely, and waiting to confront bad behavior is reactive rather than preventative. 9. Corrective Recapitulation of the Primary Family Group A young female member in a therapy group says to an older female member, "You are just like my mother, always trying to control me with your observations and suggestions." Which therapeutic factor of a group is evident by this behavior? • A. Instillation of hope • B. Existential resolution • C. Development of socializing techniques • D. Corrective recapitulation of the primary family group Rationale: This scenario represents corrective recapitulation of the primary family group, where a member unconsciously projects unresolved conflicts or dynamics from their family of origin onto other group members or leaders. The group setting allows them to safely re-enact, analyze, and correct these maladaptive relational styles. 10. Group Dynamics: Instilling Hope During group therapy, one patient says to another, "When I first started in this group, you were unable to make a decision, but now you can. You've made a lot of progress. I am beginning to think that maybe I can conquer my fears too." Which therapeutic factor is evident by this statement? • A. Hope • B. Altruism • C. Catharsis • D. Cohesiveness Rationale: Witnessing the measurable progress, healing, and recovery of peers in a therapeutic group instills a profound sense of hope and optimism in individuals who entered the group feeling demoralized, paralyzed, or pessimistic about their own prognosis. 11. Therapeutic Responses to Group Testing Behaviors During a group therapy session, a newly admitted patient suddenly says to the nurse, "How old are you? You seem too young to be leading a group." Select the nurse's most appropriate response. • A. "I am wondering what leads you to ask. Please tell me more." • B. "I am old enough to be a nurse, which qualifies me to lead this group." • C. "My age is not pertinent to why we are here and should not concern you." • D. "You are wondering whether I have enough experience to lead this group?" Rationale: Direct personal questioning from a new member is a common testing behavior linked to trust issues during the initial forming stage of a group. Clarifying the underlying anxiety ("You are wondering if I am experienced enough...") validates the patient's underlying concern without resorting to defensive, dismissive, or deflective communication styles. 12. Therapeutic Factors: Universality A patient in a group therapy session listens to others and then remarks, "I used to think I was the only one who felt afraid. I guess I'm not as alone as I thought." This comment is an example of: • A. Altruism • B. Ventilation • C. Unitversality • C. Universality • D. Group cohesiveness Rationale: Universality is the distinct validation and relief a group member feels upon discovering that their secret thoughts, intense anxieties, or perceived flaws are shared by others, effectively destroying the isolation of feeling "abnormal" or completely alone. 13. Establishing Educational Focus in Public Health Groups A nurse at the well-child clinic realizes that many parents have misconceptions about effective ways of disciplining their children. The nurse decides to form a group to address this problem. What should be the focus of the group? • A. Support • B. Socialization • C. Health education • D. Symptom management Rationale: Because the nurse has pinpointed a definitive knowledge deficit within a specific population, the primary organizational purpose and structural framework of the group must be health education (a psychoeducational approach). 14. Measurable Goals for Schizophrenia Psychoeducation Which outcome would be most appropriate for a symptom-management group for persons with schizophrenia? Group members will: • A. State the names of their medications. • B. Resolve conflicts within their families. • C. Rate anxiety at least two points lower. • D. Describe ways to cope with their illness. Rationale: The goal of a symptom-management group for patients with chronic schizophrenia is the development of real-world coping mechanisms to navigate persistent cognitive deficits, halluncinations, or executive functioning issues. Memorizing drug names fits a medication group, resolving family drama belongs to family therapy, and rating anxiety lower targets a stress-management group. 15. De-escalating Monopolizing Behaviors in Group Therapy A patient has talked constantly throughout the group therapy session, often repeating the same comments. Other members were initially attentive then became bored, inattentive, and finally sullen. Which comment by the nurse leader would be most effective? • A. Say to everyone, "Most of you have become quiet. I wonder if it might be related to concerns you may have about how the group is progressing today." • B. Say to everyone, "One person has done most of the talking. I think it would be helpful for everyone to say how that has affected your experience of the group." • C. Say to everyone, "I noticed that as our group progressed, most members became quiet, then disinterested, and now seem almost angry. What is going on?" • D. Say to the talkative patient, "You have been doing most of the talking, and others have not had a chance to speak as a result. Could you please yield to others now?" Rationale: An effective group leader guides the group to observe and resolve its own internal process bottlenecks. By highlighting the quietness of the collective group and opening up a safe discussion on overall progression (A), the leader prompts reflection without calling out or humiliating the monopolizing individual (which would escalate their anxiety and make them talk more). 16. Conceptual Frameworks: Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Guidelines followed by the leader of a therapeutic group include focusing on recognizing dysfunctional behavior and thinking patterns, followed by identifying and practicing more adaptive alternate behaviors and thinking. Which theory is evident by this approach? • A. Behavioral • B. Interpersonal • C. Psychodynamic • D. Cognitive-behavioral Rationale: The combination of identifying cognitive distortion patterns (thinking errors) and actively pairing them with behavior modification techniques (practicing adaptive alternate actions) defines Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Pure behavioral therapy omits core cognitive re-framing, interpersonal theory focuses on social communication structures, and psychodynamic theory targets unconscious childhood drivers.

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2025 Mental Health Nursing Exam 1 Practice Test –
COMPREHENSIVE FINAL PREP: VERIFIED QUESTIONS &
EXPERT ANSWERS ULTIMATE EXAM PASS PACK – LATEST
2026/2027 UPDATES CERTIFIED TESTBANK: REAL
QUESTIONS, ANSWERS, AND EXPLANATIONS
A nurse and patient discuss a problem the patient has kept secret for many years. Afterward,
the patient says, "I feel so relieved that I finally told somebody." Which term best describes the
patient's feeling?
• A. Catharsis
• B. Superego
• C. Cognitive distortion
• D. Counter-transference
Rationale: Catharsis represents the therapeutic discharge, venting, or release of deeply
repressed emotions, traditionally referred to in early psychodynamic medicine as the "talking
cure" or "getting things off one's chest." The superego represents the moral component of
personality, cognitive distortions are irrational thought patterns, and counter-transference
refers to the nurse's unconscious emotional response to the patient.
2. Candidacy for Brief Psychodynamic Therapy
Which patient is the best candidate for brief psychodynamic therapy?
• A. An accountant with a loving family and successful career who was involved in a
short extramarital affair
• B. An adult with a long history of major depression who was charged with driving under
the influence (DUI)
• C. A woman with a history of borderline personality disorder who recently cut both
wrists
• D. An adult male recently diagnosed with anorexia nervosa
Rationale: The ideal candidates for brief psychodynamic therapy are well-functioning,
introspective, highly motivated individuals (sometimes called the "worried well") who exhibit a
clearly defined, isolated area of emotional conflict. Patients with active psychoses, severe
personality disorders (such as borderline personality disorder), active self-harm, severe
character disorders, or severe unmanaged major depressions are poor candidates for this
specific model.
3. Patient Expectations in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
[Select all that apply] A patient states, "I'm starting cognitive-behavioral therapy. What can I
expect from the sessions?" Which responses by the nurse would be appropriate?


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,hg


• A. "The therapist will be active and questioning."
• B. "You will be given some homework assignments."
• C. "The therapist will ask you to describe your dreams."
• D. "The therapist will help you look at your ideas and beliefs about yourself."
• E. "The goal is to increase subjectivity about thoughts that govern your behavior."
Rationale: Cognitive-behavioral therapy is highly structured, goal-directed, and active.
Therapists ask targeted questions to help patients challenge and reality-test automatic thoughts
and core beliefs (A, D). Homework assignments are routinely utilized to reinforce adaptive
behaviors outside of sessions (B). Dream analysis belongs to psychoanalysis, and the goal of CBT
is to increase objectivity (not subjectivity) regarding cognitions.
4. Successful Resolution of Erikson's Late Adulthood Stage
[Select all that apply] Which comments by an older adult best indicate successful completion of
their developmental task?
• A. "I am proud of my children's successes in life."
• B. "I should have given to community charities more often."
• C. "My relationship with my father made life more difficult for me."
• D. "My experiences in the war helped me appreciate the meaning of life."
• E. "I often wonder what would have happened if I had chosen a different career."
Rationale: The developmental task for older adults (65+ years) according to Erikson is Integrity
vs. Despair. Expressing fulfillment and pride in one’s legacy (A) or demonstrating wisdom and
meaning derived from past life struggles (D) marks successful ego integrity. Expressing deep
regrets, unresolved blame, or lingering self-doubt points to despair.
5. Identifying Characteristics of Self-Actualization
[Select all that apply] Which comments by an adult best indicate self-actualization?
• A. "I am content with a good book."
• B. "I often wonder if I chose the right career."
• C. "Sometimes I think about how my parents would have handled problems."
• D. "It's important for our country to provide basic health care services for everyone."
• E. "When I was lost at sea for 2 days, I gained an understanding of what is important."
Rationale: According to Maslow, self-actualized individuals exhibit traits such as an appreciation
for solitude/privacy (A), a deeply rooted democratic worldview regarding human rights and
welfare (D), and profound growth or clarity following peak experiences (E). Self-doubt,
persistent second-guessing, and defensive or external dependencies are inconsistent with self-
actualization.
6. Distinguishing the Art vs. Science of Nursing
[Select all that apply] Which activities represent the art of nursing?
• A. Administering medications on time to a group of patients
• B. Listening to a new widow grieve her husband's death
• C. Helping a patient obtain groceries from a food bank
• D. Teaching a patient about a new medication




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, hg


• E. Holding the hand of a frightened patient
Rationale: The art of nursing is anchored in active presence, compassion, relational care, and
patient advocacy (B, C, E). The science of nursing involves the technical application of clinical
knowledge, pathophysiology, pharmacology, objective instruction, and safety-critical execution
(A, D).
7. Therapeutic Factors: Interpersonal Learning
A patient tells members of a therapy group, "I hear voices saying my doctor is poisoning me."
Another patient replies, "I used to hear voices too. They sounded real, but I found out later they
were not. The voices you hear are not real either." Which therapeutic factor is exemplified in
this interchange?
• A. Catharsis
• B. Universality
• C. Imitative behavior
• D. Interpersonal learning
Rationale: Through interpersonal learning, group members gain valuable cognitive insight into
their own psychiatric symptoms and reality testing by interacting with and receiving direct
feedback from fellow peers. Universality differs slightly by focusing on the broader, comforting
relief that "I am not alone in my suffering."
8. Establishing Group Norms for Mutual Respect
A leader plans to start a new self-esteem building group. Which intervention would be most
helpful for assuring mutual respect within the group?
• A. Describe the importance of mutual respect in the first session and make it a group
norm.
• B. Exclude potential members whose behavior suggests they are likely to be
disrespectful.
• C. Give members a brochure describing the purpose, norms, and expectations of the
group.
• D. Explain that mutual respect is expected and confront those who are not respectful.
Rationale: Proactively articulating the functional benefit of mutual respect during the
orientation phase establishes it as an explicit group norm from the very beginning. Handing out
brochures is too passive, excluding members based on assumed behavior cuts off therapeutic
access prematurely, and waiting to confront bad behavior is reactive rather than preventative.
9. Corrective Recapitulation of the Primary Family Group
A young female member in a therapy group says to an older female member, "You are just like
my mother, always trying to control me with your observations and suggestions." Which
therapeutic factor of a group is evident by this behavior?
• A. Instillation of hope
• B. Existential resolution
• C. Development of socializing techniques
• D. Corrective recapitulation of the primary family group




hg

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