Answers | Verified Solutions with Detailed Rationales
(2026/2027 Edition)
Mental Health Nursing Examination
Herzing University
NSG 221 – HESI Review
2026/2027 Edition
SECTION 1: Foundations of Mental Health Nursing
(6 questions)
Question 1
A nurse is conducting a Mental Status Examination (MSE) on a newly admitted client.
The client is wearing a winter coat indoors, has unkempt hair, and avoids eye contact.
Which component of the MSE is the nurse primarily assessing?
A. Cognition
B. Appearance
C. Thought process
D. Judgment
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Appearance is the correct component of the MSE being assessed.
Appearance includes the client's dress, grooming, hygiene, and posture. Wearing a
winter coat indoors, unkempt hair, and poor eye contact all fall under the appearance
category. Cognition (A) refers to memory, attention, and orientation. Thought process
(C) refers to how the client organizes and expresses ideas. Judgment (D) is assessed
through hypothetical situations or the client's understanding of consequences.
DSM-5-TR and standard psychiatric nursing assessment frameworks classify these
observations under the appearance section of the MSE.
Question 2
,During an intake interview, a client states, "I know I have bipolar disorder, and I
understand that I need to take my medication and attend therapy to stay well." This
statement best demonstrates which MSE component?
A. Insight
B. Affect
C. Mood
D. Cognition
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: Insight refers to the client's awareness and understanding of their illness,
including the need for treatment. The client's statement demonstrates full awareness of
their diagnosis and treatment requirements. Affect (B) refers to the observable
expression of emotions. Mood (C) refers to the subjective emotional state reported by
the client. Cognition (D) involves memory, orientation, and intellectual functioning. In
psychiatric nursing, insight is critical for treatment adherence and is a key component
of the MSE that predicts prognosis.
Question 3
A nursing student asks the clinical instructor about the difference between mental
health and mental illness. Which response by the instructor best describes the mental
health-illness continuum?
A. Mental health and mental illness are mutually exclusive states with no overlap
B. Mental health is the absence of mental illness, and mental illness is the absence of
mental health
C. Mental health and mental illness exist on a continuum, and an individual may
experience both simultaneously
D. Mental illness is a permanent state that cannot change over time
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: The mental health-illness continuum is a dynamic model in which individuals
can move back and forth between states of mental health and mental illness. A person
may have a mental illness diagnosis while still experiencing periods of mental wellness,
or a person without a diagnosed mental illness may experience poor mental health
during stress. Option A is incorrect because the states are not mutually exclusive.
,Option B is incorrect because mental health is not merely the absence of illness. Option
D is incorrect because mental illness is not necessarily permanent; recovery and
remission are possible. This biopsychosocial understanding is central to modern
psychiatric nursing practice.
Question 4
A client with schizophrenia tells the nurse, "I don't need to shower because the
government is watching me through the water pipes anyway." The nurse recognizes this
as an example of which defense mechanism?
A. Denial
B. Projection
C. Displacement
D. Rationalization
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: Rationalization is the defense mechanism in which an individual creates
logical explanations to justify behavior or avoid the true underlying reason. The client is
providing a seemingly logical reason (government surveillance) to avoid the real issue,
which may be paranoia, avolition, or negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Denial (A)
involves refusing to acknowledge reality. Projection (B) involves attributing one's own
unacceptable thoughts to others. Displacement (C) involves redirecting emotions from
the original source to a safer target. Understanding defense mechanisms helps
psychiatric nurses plan therapeutic interventions that address underlying anxiety and
psychopathology.
Question 5
A nurse is caring for a client who recently lost a job and has been isolating from friends.
The client reports feeling "like a burden to everyone." The nurse recognizes that stigma
surrounding mental illness can create barriers to care. Which nursing intervention best
addresses stigma?
A. Tell the client that everyone feels this way sometimes
B. Encourage the client to avoid discussing mental health concerns with others
C. Provide psychoeducation about mental health conditions and normalize help-seeking
behavior
, D. Suggest the client keep their diagnosis confidential from family members
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Providing psychoeducation and normalizing help-seeking behavior directly
addresses stigma by increasing knowledge and reducing shame. Option A minimizes
the client's experience and is non-therapeutic. Option B reinforces isolation and stigma.
Option D suggests secrecy, which may increase shame and reduce social support. The
biopsychosocial model of mental illness emphasizes that stigma is a social
determinant of health that can prevent individuals from seeking necessary treatment.
Psychiatric nurses have an ethical responsibility to combat stigma through education
and advocacy.
Question 6
A nurse is establishing a therapeutic relationship with a client diagnosed with major
depressive disorder. Which action best demonstrates the principle of "therapeutic use of
self"?
A. Sharing personal stories about the nurse's own depression to build rapport
B. Maintaining professional boundaries while demonstrating empathy and genuine
concern
C. Accepting small gifts from the client to strengthen the therapeutic alliance
D. Inviting the client to connect on social media to provide ongoing support
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: Therapeutic use of self involves the nurse using their personality, knowledge,
and skills intentionally within professional boundaries to promote client healing.
Maintaining boundaries while demonstrating empathy is the core of this principle.
Option A violates boundaries through inappropriate self-disclosure. Option C blurs
professional boundaries and could create dependency. Option D is a serious boundary
violation. Hildegard Peplau's theory of interpersonal relations emphasizes that the
nurse's most effective tool is the self, used within a framework of professional
boundaries to create a safe, healing environment.