NRNP 6645 FINAL REVISION EXAM
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Psychotherapy with Multiple Modalities
Walden University
81 Original Revision Questions with Answers, Rationales, and High-Yield Notes
Correct answers are highlighted in yellow
High-yield revision notes are highlighted in green
Original study material created for revision purposes; not an official university examination.
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, NRNP 6645 FINAL REVISION EXAM QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Question 1
A psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner begins the first psychotherapy session with a new client. Which action best establishes the
foundation of a therapeutic alliance?
A. Immediately interpret the client's unconscious conflicts
B. Clarify goals, roles, confidentiality, and expectations
C. Promise that treatment will remove all symptoms
D. Avoid discussing how progress will be evaluated
Answer: B. Clarify goals, roles, confidentiality, and expectations
Rationale: A clear treatment frame helps the client understand the purpose, limits, and collaborative nature of therapy. Early agreement about
goals and expectations supports trust and engagement.
High-yield note: The therapeutic alliance is strengthened by collaboration, empathy, transparency, and agreed-upon goals.
Question 2
During therapy, a client asks the PMHNP to attend a private family celebration. Which response best maintains professional boundaries?
A. Accept because social contact always strengthens rapport
B. Decline respectfully and explore what the invitation means to the client
C. Ignore the invitation and change the topic
D. End treatment immediately
Answer: B. Decline respectfully and explore what the invitation means to the client
Rationale: A respectful decline preserves the therapeutic frame while allowing exploration of the client's feelings and expectations. Boundary
decisions should be guided by clinical benefit, ethics, and risk of role confusion.
High-yield note: Boundary crossings require careful clinical judgment; boundary violations exploit or harm the client.
Question 3
Which statement by the PMHNP best demonstrates informed consent for psychotherapy?
A. Therapy has no risks, so there is little to discuss
B. You must continue until I decide treatment is complete
C. We will review the approach, possible benefits, risks, alternatives, fees, and limits of confidentiality
D. Only medication treatment requires informed consent
Answer: C. We will review the approach, possible benefits, risks, alternatives, fees, and limits of confidentiality
Rationale: Informed consent includes the nature and purpose of treatment, expected benefits, foreseeable risks, alternatives, costs, client rights, and
confidentiality limits. It is an ongoing process rather than a one-time signature.
High-yield note: Consent should be understandable, voluntary, and revisited when the treatment plan changes.
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, NRNP 6645 FINAL REVISION EXAM QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Question 4
A client repeatedly arrives late and misses sessions without notice. What is the most therapeutic initial response?
A. Discharge the client without discussion
B. Explore the pattern, barriers, and meaning of missed sessions
C. Waive all attendance expectations
D. Assume the client is resistant and confront harshly
Answer: B. Explore the pattern, barriers, and meaning of missed sessions
Rationale: Attendance problems may reflect practical barriers, ambivalence, avoidance, or relational dynamics. Exploring the pattern
collaboratively helps identify obstacles and informs the treatment plan.
High-yield note: Address therapy-interfering behavior directly, neutrally, and without shaming.
Question 5
A client reports that a previous therapist shared private information with a relative. Which response is most appropriate?
A. Confidentiality can never be limited
B. Explain current confidentiality practices and legally required exceptions
C. State that family members always have access to records
D. Avoid discussing confidentiality to prevent anxiety
Answer: B. Explain current confidentiality practices and legally required exceptions
Rationale: The PMHNP should explain how information is protected and describe relevant legal and ethical exceptions. Clear communication can
repair mistrust and support an informed therapeutic relationship.
High-yield note: Common limits involve immediate safety concerns, abuse reporting requirements, and court-related obligations,
depending on law and policy.
Question 6
Which documentation entry best reflects professional psychotherapy charting?
A. Client was manipulative and difficult
B. Client discussed conflict with supervisor; affect was anxious; cognitive restructuring was practiced; client identified one alternative thought
C. Session went well
D. Client is obviously lying
Answer: B. Client discussed conflict with supervisor; affect was anxious; cognitive restructuring was practiced; client identified one
alternative thought
Rationale: Objective, behaviorally specific documentation records relevant content, mental status observations, interventions, response, progress,
and plan. Judgmental labels should be avoided.
High-yield note: Document clinically necessary information, not a word-for-word transcript.
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