Mental Health HESI NSG 221 2025
update |COMPREHENSIVE
QUESTIONS AND VERIFIED
ANSWERS WITH RATIONALES|GET
IT 100% CORRECT |already graded
A+
Save
Terms in this set (86)
, Countertransference occurs when the
therapist displaces onto the client
attitudes or feelings from his or her
past. For example, a female nurse who
has teenage children and who is
experiencing extreme frustration with
an adolescent client may respond by
Countertransfere
adopting a parental or chastising
nce
tone. The nurse is countertransfering
her own attitudes and feelings toward
her children onto the client. Nurses
can deal with countertransference by
examining their own feelings and
responses, using self-awareness, and
talking with colleagues.
, Tardive dyskinesia (TD), a syndrome of
permanent involuntary movements, is
most commonly caused by the long-
term use of conventional
antipsychotic drugs. Tongue thrusting
Tardive and protruding, lip smacking, blinking,
Dyskinesia grimacing, and other excessive
unnecessary facial movements are
characteristic. After it has developed,
TD is irreversible, although decreasing
or discontinuing antipsychotic
medications can arrest its progression
Clients receiving mental health care
retain all civil rights afforded to all
people except the right to leave the
hospital in the case of involuntary
commitment. Any restrictions (e.g.,
Civial Rights- mail, visitors, clothing) must be made
Psychiatric for a verifiable, documented reason.
Clients These decisions can be made by a
court or a designated decision-
making person or persons, for
example, a primary nurse or treatment
team, depending on local laws or
regulations.
, In group therapy, clients participate in
sessions with a group of people. The
members share a common purpose
and are expected to contribute to the
group to benefit others and receive
benefit from others in return. Group
rules are established, which all
Group Therapy members must observe. These rules
vary according to the type of group.
Being a member of a group allows the
client to learn new ways of looking at
a problem or ways of coping with or
solving problems and also helps him
or her learn important interpersonal
skills.
Empathy is the ability to place oneself
into the experience of another for a
moment in time. Nurses develop
empathy by gathering as much
information about an issue as possible
Crisis
directly from the client to avoid
Intervention-
interjecting their personal
Empathy
experiences and interpretations of the
situation. The nurse asks as many
questions as needed to gain a clear
understanding of the client's
perceptions of an event or issue.
update |COMPREHENSIVE
QUESTIONS AND VERIFIED
ANSWERS WITH RATIONALES|GET
IT 100% CORRECT |already graded
A+
Save
Terms in this set (86)
, Countertransference occurs when the
therapist displaces onto the client
attitudes or feelings from his or her
past. For example, a female nurse who
has teenage children and who is
experiencing extreme frustration with
an adolescent client may respond by
Countertransfere
adopting a parental or chastising
nce
tone. The nurse is countertransfering
her own attitudes and feelings toward
her children onto the client. Nurses
can deal with countertransference by
examining their own feelings and
responses, using self-awareness, and
talking with colleagues.
, Tardive dyskinesia (TD), a syndrome of
permanent involuntary movements, is
most commonly caused by the long-
term use of conventional
antipsychotic drugs. Tongue thrusting
Tardive and protruding, lip smacking, blinking,
Dyskinesia grimacing, and other excessive
unnecessary facial movements are
characteristic. After it has developed,
TD is irreversible, although decreasing
or discontinuing antipsychotic
medications can arrest its progression
Clients receiving mental health care
retain all civil rights afforded to all
people except the right to leave the
hospital in the case of involuntary
commitment. Any restrictions (e.g.,
Civial Rights- mail, visitors, clothing) must be made
Psychiatric for a verifiable, documented reason.
Clients These decisions can be made by a
court or a designated decision-
making person or persons, for
example, a primary nurse or treatment
team, depending on local laws or
regulations.
, In group therapy, clients participate in
sessions with a group of people. The
members share a common purpose
and are expected to contribute to the
group to benefit others and receive
benefit from others in return. Group
rules are established, which all
Group Therapy members must observe. These rules
vary according to the type of group.
Being a member of a group allows the
client to learn new ways of looking at
a problem or ways of coping with or
solving problems and also helps him
or her learn important interpersonal
skills.
Empathy is the ability to place oneself
into the experience of another for a
moment in time. Nurses develop
empathy by gathering as much
information about an issue as possible
Crisis
directly from the client to avoid
Intervention-
interjecting their personal
Empathy
experiences and interpretations of the
situation. The nurse asks as many
questions as needed to gain a clear
understanding of the client's
perceptions of an event or issue.