[Solved] NURS 6660 Midterm with Answers
Question 1
Which of the following statements is true with respect to children who present to care acutely due
... [Show More] to violent, enraged behavior?
A. Under no circumstances should the PMHNP approach this patient.
B. Prepubertal children typically require medication as they are too young to respond to conversation.
C. Children who have a history of repeated, self-limited, severe tantrums require at least a 72-hour admission.
D. If the child appears to be calming down in the emergency area, the clinician may ask the child for his version of events.
Question 2
Phillip is a 5-year-old boy who is in care after being referred for failure to speak at school. He has been in kindergarten for 5 months, and initially his teacher thought he was just shy, so she did not focus on him. However, it has become increasingly apparent that he flat out will not speak at school. Phillip’s parents areadamant that there is not any problem at home and that Phillip talks with them and his older sister routinely. Further assessment reveals that he has always been extremely shy and that he doesn’t like it when people make a fuss over him. The PMHNP suspects that Phillip has selective mutism, which is closely related to:
A. A history of sexual abuse
B. Fetal alcohol syndrome
C. Early onset schizophrenia
D. Social anxiety disorder
Question 3
Jason is a 17-month-old male who is referred for evaluation of an unusually high level of irritability. His mother says he cries ―all the time,‖ and sometimes he just cannot be comforted; Jason’s pediatrician felt that the complaint warranted an evaluation by child psychiatry. Comprehensive assessment of Jason’s irritability should include all the following except:
A. A comprehensive medical assessment
B. Standardized developmental measures
C. Assessment without the parents present
D. Observation of Jason during play
Question 4
Treatment of abused children is multimodal and long term. The single most important aspect of treatment is:
A. Establishing a safe place for the child
B. Exposure related to the feared experience
C. Psychoeducation
D. Cognitive-behavioral interventions
Question 5
Having child and adolescent patients rate their feelings and moods on a scale of 1–10 is most effective in which age group?
A. 18-months to 3 years
B. 3 to 5 years
C. 5 to 11 years
D. 12 to 17 years
Question 6
The PMHNP is evaluating his data for the assessment of Eric, a 23-month-old male who was referred because he is having nightmares to the extent that most nights he is waking up family members with his crying and screaming. In addition to the clinical interview with the parents and patient, developmental assessment, and standardized tools, the assessment should include:
A. Review of a video recording of a nightmare event and Eric’s immediate response
B. Age-appropriate interview, e.g., ―If you had three wishes, what would they be?‖
C. Observation of Eric in a playroom where he is unaware that he is being watched
D. Partially open-ended questions that provide some focus but allow expression of feeling
Question 7
What is the primary diagnostic difference between obsessive-compulsive disorders in children as compared to adults?
A. Age of onset
B. Response to treatment
C. Recognition that the thoughts or behaviors areirrational
D. The thoughts or behaviors occupy > 1 hour daily
Question 8
Psychiatric assessment of children and adolescents is best achieved by a combination of tools and techniques best suited to the child’s age and developmental stage. When
interviewing a 10-year-old, the PMHNP may have the best success by having the patient:
A. Talk with the examiner via dolls
B. Respond to open-ended questions
C. Draw family members and peers
D. Complete an MMPI
Question 9
The clinical interview is an important part of psychiatric assessment and should be conducted early in the diagnostic process. However, a comprehensive assessment should include other information-gathering modalities because the clinical interview:
A. Does not offer flexibility in understanding the evolution of the problem
B. Frequently deemphasizes the influence of environmental factors
C. May not systematically cover all psychiatric diagnostic categories
D. Creates a dialogue in which patients cannot give subjective responses
Question 10
Comprehensive psychiatric assessment ultimately requires the integration of biological predisposition, psychodynamic factors, environmental factors, and life events. These factors, along with a mental status exam, developmental assessment, and any appropriate standardized testing is collectively referred to as:
A. Neuropsychiatric assessment
B. Biopsychosocial formulation
C. The Physical and Neurological Examination of Soft Signs (PANESS)
D. Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children
B
Question 11
Caleb is a 10-year-old boy who is referred for assessment because he is not following any of the rules of discipline at home. His parents report that they have had three separate nannies resign in the last 4 months because Caleb is unmanageable. This is a long-standing problem, going back to daycare even before kindergarten. The PMHNP knows that when conducting her initial interview of Caleb she should:
A. Anticipate that he can tolerate up to a 45-minute session
B. Consider that symbolic play with dolls will be informative
C. Interview him alone before involving the parents
D. Be clear that he is there because of problem behavior
D
Question 12
Comprehensive psychiatric/mental health assessment of children includes an interview with the parents or caregivers. Which of the following is not a true statement with respect to the parental interview?
A. The parents’ own emotional adjustments should be determined.
B. The parents areusually more aware of symptoms than the child.
C. The parents may prefer to speak with the PMHNP separately.
D. The parents’ upbringings arerelevant to the child’s diagnosis.
B
Question 13
Karen is a 7-year-old girl who has been started on atomoxetine 18 mg once daily for ADHD, which is just under the recommended starting dose of 0.5 mg/kg/day. After just 1 week, her parents report that she is not eating, complains of stomach pain almost every day, is having trouble sleeping, and is ―really cranky.‖ Her teacher says she never seen anything like it; that Karen is actually worse on her ADHD medication. A careful review reveals that Karen is taking her medication just as prescribed. She is not on any other prescribed, over-the-counter, or herbal medications. The PMHNP considers that:
A. These arecommon in the first weeks of therapy and the dose should be increased to a therapeutic regimen
B. Karen may be a poor metabolizer of CYP2D6 medications and will need a change of therapy
C. Behavioral modalities should be started as optimal management of ADHD is multimodal
D. Fluoxetine should be added to the regimen as it has demonstrated efficacy with coincident anxiety
A
Question 14
When treating anxiety disorders in young children, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is preferred as initial treatment if the child is able to function sufficiently to engage in daily activities while in treatment. Which of the following therapies is appropriate for those children too young to engage in traditional CBT?
A. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI)
B. SSRI in combination with CBT
C. Coaching Approach behavior and Leading by Modeling (CALM)
D. CALM in combination with a first-generation antihistamine
A
Question 15
Adam is a 26-month-old boy referred by his pediatrician for evaluation of speech delay. He has not spoken any intelligible words. Adam is an only child, and the parents deny any contributory medical history. Adam was delivered at 38 weeks 5 days’ gestation without complication. At 5 weeks of age he developed respiratory failure due to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and was hospitalized on a ventilator for several days; since then, the parents report only the occasional upper respiratory virus. They report that Adam is a ―really good‖ child and will often entertain himself for periods of time with his building blocks; rarely he will have a ―temper tantrum.‖ The parents confirm that Adam does not speak any recognizable words. While he does make sounds, his parents admit that he does not appear to be trying to communicate with them. When considering a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), the PMNHP would expect further history and examination to reveal:
A. The presence of imaginary play
B. A failed hearing test
C. Exaggerated response to minor injury
D. Notable decrease in attachment behaviors
D
Question 16
Comprehensive psychiatric assessment of young school-aged children requires a variety of information sources. Input is necessary from parents, caregivers, and teachers because children of this age group cannot reliably provide information about:
A. Their own fears and anxieties
B. Psychotic episodes they have experienced
C. The chronology of symptom presentation
D. Episodes of mood extremes
C
Question 17
Mark is a 5-year-old boy brought in for evaluation because his behavior at school has become so disruptive. According to the parents, Mark’s teacher says he just refuses to follow the rules of the classroom, openly defies her, and actually seems to try and upset his classmates. The teacher says Mark gets frustrated very easily when he cannot complete a task and is resistant to any effort to help him. This happens almost every day, and the teacher has indicated that she will not be able to keep him in the classroom if
things do not change. Mark’s parents admit that he has always been ―willful‖ and difficult to manage, but as he is an only child with a stay-at-home mom, the family overlooked his disruptive tendencies and accommodated Mark. The parents report that
they often skip social events and family outings because they don’t know how Mark will behave. While counseling Mark’s parents about the theories of causation of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), the PMHNP tells the parents that psychiatric theories include all of the following except:
A. Unresolved conflict as a fuel for aggressive behavior targeting authority figures
B. The concept that oppositionality is a reinforced, learned behavior in which the child exerts control over authority figures
C. A maladaptive response to parents’ modeling of conflict avoidance as manifested by even-tempered responses to parent-toddler struggles
D. That the behavior is reinforced by increased parental attention in response to the undesirable behavior
C
Question 18
Trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy is a CBT approach characterized by 10–16 sessions comprised of four components: (1) psychoeducation, (2) stress inoculation, (3) gradual exposure, and (4) cognitive reprocessing. This is a management strategy for post- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) that is:
A. Most effective when paired with eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR)
B. Considered by experts to be the first-line management approach for treatment of PTSD symptoms
C. Very effective in individuals but generally not recommended for group treatment, e.g., school-based traumas
D. Gaining widespread acceptance as a first-line management strategy for other forms of anxiety disorders
B
Question 19
Being Brave: A Program for Coping With Anxiety for Young Children and Their Parents is a manualized intervention for anxiety disorders in young children between the ages of 4 and 7 years old. It uses a combination of parent-only and parent-child sessions and demonstrates significant improvement in children with all forms of anxiety disorders except:
A. Separation anxiety
B. Social anxiety
C. Generalized anxiety
D. Specific phobia
C
Question 20
During the mental status exam of Oliver, a 4-year-old child, the PMHNP appreciates that he appears to be having transient visual and auditory hallucinations. The PMHNP knows that the best approach to this finding is to consider that:
A. This is most consistent with early-onset schizophrenia
B. An organic brain disorder should be ruled out
C. These arenormal findings in very young children
D. Comprehensive psychiatric assessment is indicated
A
Question 21
Sarah is a 10-year-old patient who has been diagnosed with oppositional defiant disorder. While discussing the diagnosis, course and prognosis, and treatment strategies with Sarah’s mother, the PMHNP emphasizes that successful management of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) must include:
A. Parent training
B. Pharmacotherapy
C. Time out
D. Conflict avoidance
A
Question 22
Harmony is a 4-year-old female who has been through several evaluations for behavioral abnormalities that have become increasingly disruptive, and the family is concerned for the safety of both Harmony and her 2-year-old brother. Comprehensive assessment of Harmony includes neuropsychiatric testing. The PMHNP documents the presence of neurological hard signs. These suggest:
A. Brain lesions
B. Early-onset schizophrenia
C. Low intelligence
D. Learning disability
D
Question 23
Despite a wealth of data-based information on bullying, including information about its forms, presenting symptoms, and consequences, current research suggests that accurate information about bullying is not influencing preventive and awareness strategies in most school systems. When advising school personnel, parents, and primary care providers
about bullying, the PMHNP should emphasize that:
A. Physical bullying has the most dangerous outcomes
B. Bullying is more common in boys than girls
C. Victims often develop alcohol abuse problems
D. Verbal bullying is the most common form
D
Question 24
Wendy is a 6-year-old female being evaluated by the PMHNP following a suicide attempt. The police were called when a neighbor saw Wendy jump out of the open window of her first-floor apartment. She was unhurt, but when the neighbor asked why she jumped out she said she wanted to kill herself. Which coincident finding would warrant an inpatient psychiatric admission for Wendy?
A. This was not the first episode.
B. The caretaker is incapable of arranging follow-up.
C. One or both of the biological parents has a history of suicide attempts.
D. Wendy was left with a babysitter when the incident occurred.
B
Question 25
Psychiatric assessment of the adolescent patient is different in several ways from assessment of younger children. While trying to establish a therapeutic environment with an adolescent who is openly hostile, one of the most important things the PMHNP can do is to:
A. Be more liberal in terms of limit setting and tolerating hostility in order to
facilitate honest communication
B. Ensure the patient that under no circumstances will anything said be repeated to the parents
C. Allow silences to last as long as necessary until the patient is inclined to offer any verbal input
D. Communicate to the patient that his or her perspective is valued and will not be judged or critiqued
A
Question 26
The PMHNP is preparing an educational program for primary care providers about child abuse awareness. The goal of the program is to increase the understanding of primary care providers regarding risk factors for child abuse so that at-risk families may be identified and primary preventive strategies implemented before any harm occurs to children. The program emphasizes risk factors for child maltreatment to include all of the following except:
A. Single-parent families
B. Low parental education
C. Parental substance abuse
D. Firstborn child in the family
D
Question 27
A variety of questionnaires, scales, guided-interview tools, and other standardized instruments areavailable to aid with various aspects of assessment. The majority areintended only to be used as an aid to information gathering and not to make a diagnosis. Which of the following tools requires training to administer and can be used to determine diagnoses?
A. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Assessment (CAPA)
B. Brief Impairment Scale
C. Pictorial Instrument for Children and Adolescents (PICA-III-R)
D. Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist
D
Question 28
Brian is a 13-year-old boy who presents for care. He was initially brought in by his mother after a family friend suggested mental health evaluation. Brian has been suffering with a variety physical symptoms for the past 8 months, ever since school started. He has missed so much school that he is in danger of not advancing to the eighth grade. He persistently complains of headache, stomachache, nausea, and dizziness. He has even vomited on more than one occasion, so his mother knows something is ―really wrong.‖ The pediatrician has been unable to identify a cause of symptoms or offer any relief.
During his interview, the PMHNP learns that this is Brian’s first year in middle school. There arehundreds of students, and it is much larger than the intimate elementary school Brian attended from kindergarten through sixth grade. Brian is certain that all the students aremaking fun of him; he does not even go to the lunchroom to eat. He has stopped socializing with his small group of friends from elementary school because they have made friends among the other seventh graders. Brian says he wants to have friends, but he just gets nervous and he is sure they will all make fun of him. Brian enjoys
―hanging out‖ with his cousins, and they spent the week of spring break playing at his house. But, when it was time to go back to school, Brian was so nauseous he could not attend. Initial treatment for Brian should include:
A. Psychiatric hospitalization
B. Cognitive behavioral therapy
C. Fluvoxamine (Luvox) 50 mg daily
D. Family interventions
C
Question 29
When evaluating treatment strategies for a 14-year-old patient with obsessive- compulsive disorder (OCD), the PMHNP considers that evidence-based data from the Pediatric OCD Treatment Study (POTS) suggests that best outcomes areachieved with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and:
A. Clomipramine (Anafranil)
B. Sertraline (Zoloft)
C. Aripiprazole (Abilify)
D. Lithium (Eskalith)
B
Question 30
Susan is a 10-year-old girl who has been referred by her pediatrician for mental health evaluation due to a persistent collection of somatic symptoms for which there is no apparent organic cause. For the last 2 months Susan has been increasingly distraught at the prospect of leaving home. This has become very apparent since the start of the school year. She often develops stomachaches and headaches when it is time to go to school.
Lately she does not want to go to bed unless her mother remains upstairs. The PMHNP considers a diagnosis of:
A. Separation anxiety disorder
B. Social anxiety disorder
C. Generalized anxiety disorder
D. Social phobia disorder
C
Question 31
Nate is a 9-year-old boy who presents for a follow-up visit. He was diagnosed with ADHD 4 months ago and started on methylphenidate 5 mg b.i.d. At a 1-month follow-up
his mother reported that he was not really demonstrating any improvement of symptoms, so he was increased to 10 mg b.i.d. He has been on this dose for 1 month. Nate reports
that sometimes he doesn’t feel so great; he gets a stomach ache sometimes and a few weeks ago he felt ―dizzy.‖ His vital signs arewithin normal limits. Mom says that on this dose his teacher says his behavior in school is much improved, and she notices that at home he seems more focused and is able to do his homework and chores. The appropriate action with regard to his medications at this point would be to:
Discuss with Mom nonstimulant options such as atomoxetine
Reduce his dose back to 5 mg b.i.d. until adverse effects resolve
Add 25 mg of diphenhydramine to his daily regimen at h.s.
Continue the current plan of care and reassess in 1 month
D
Question 32
Management of a child who has a pattern of fire-setting behavior must include:
A. Combination therapies that include medication with an SSRI
B. Parental counseling that the child should never be allowed home alone
C. Inpatient admission for intensive individual and group therapy
D. Behavioral interventions characterized by negative reinforcement
A
uestion 33
Which of the following behaviors is least suspicious for an adolescent who is being bullied at school?
A. A significant change in study habits in which the patient is demonstrating higher academic achievement to the exclusion of a social life
B. A persistent, sustained increase in the number and variety of physical complaints that have no obvious organic cause
C. Evidence that the patient has started smoking cigarettes and seems to spend more time alone than usual
D. Migration to a completely different peer group and a change in appearance and
behavior to aggressively mimic the new group
A
Question 34
The PMHNP is evaluating the data he has collected in the assessment of Anna, a 9-year- old girl who presented for evaluation because her teacher strongly encouraged Anna’s mother to seek care. According to the teacher, Anna has been consistently disruptive in the classroom since the beginning of the school year, 2 months ago. The assessment includes unstructured interviews with Anna, her mother, and grandmother, and Connors Parent or Teacher Rating Scale for ADHD completed by her primary school teacher and mother. The PMNHP notes a marked disparity among reports—they all seem to contradict each other. The PMHNP considers that this apparent contradiction:
A. Likely indicates a subjective bias from the mother or teacher
B. May accurately reflect Anna’s behavior in different settings
C. Requires that other adults exposed to Anna’s behavior provide input
D. Indicates that a different approach to Anna’s assessment is necessary
B
Question 35
Kristina is a 17-year-old female who was encouraged to care by her parents because they have been worried about her. She has always been very healthy, happy, and active in school and sports. Her boyfriend of three years broke up with her last fall, right before he left for college. Since then she has lost all interest in her friends and school. Her parents say that she doesn’t do anything after school except go to her room. She has lost 16 pounds in the last 9 months. During the second session with the PMHNP, Kristina insists that her parents areoverreacting, that she is doing OK in school and is eating just fine.
She says of course she was sad that her boyfriend broke up with her, but she has gotten over it and moved on. During this session, the PMNHP appreciates that Kristina’s clothes areclearly too big for her, her eyes fill up with tears whenever her boyfriend is mentioned, and she does not seem engaged in the interview. While considering her assessment, the PMHNP recognizes that:
A. The absence of a remote history of psychiatric disease makes a true psychiatric diagnosis unlikely
B. The PMHNP must prioritize Kristina’s subjective report versus her parents’ report
C. A standardized assessment tool such as the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)- 9 will be required for diagnosis
D. The objective signs evident in Kristina’s examination aremore compelling than her perspective on symptoms
D
Question 36
Because some children exposed to significant traumatic events do not develop post- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), there has been research interest in neurobiology and assessment of predisposing or risk factors. Children with PTSD have been noted to have which of the following when compared to age-matched controls?
A. Overactive amygdalae
B. Lower intelligence quotients
C. Preexisting personality disorders
D. Fourfold risk when first-degree family member affected
D
Question 37
Richard is an 11-year-old patient who has been hospitalized following a suicide attempt in which he mixed a variety of household cleansers and poisons and swallowed them. He has been medically cleared, and his initial psychiatric assessment reveals a preadolescent male who made this suicide attempt because he was so unhappy at school. His family recently moved from another part of the country and he started a new school. The other children have been bullying him, and he just decided it would be better to die. He has no siblings and no friends in this new town. Which additional findings during this assessment would prompt the PMHNP to suggest a psychiatric admission?
A. His mother has a history of severe post-partum depression
B. A finding of mild depression during this examination
C. Appreciable ambivalence about suicide
D. Complete absence of any other psychiatric diagnoses
B
Question 38
During the initial interview with Lorraine, a 13-year-old girl being evaluated for oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), the PMHNP does not appreciate any of the behavior that has been reported by Lorraine’s mother and teachers. Lorraine is found to be well groomed, appropriate in her interaction, and says she is not sure why she is there. Lorraine says that her parents and teachers say that she is always arguing and breaking the rules, but she does not really understand what the problem is. The PMHNP notes that:
A. He will need to have more information from adults who arenot in frequent contact with Lorraine
B. This is common, as the symptoms areoften only expressed to adults who know the child well.
C. ODD is episodic, and it is not unusual to have long symptom-free periods; a normal interview does not preclude diagnosis
D. The diagnosis should be reconsidered as it is almost impossible to have a diagnosis of ODD without the patient’s awareness of symptoms
B
Question 39
A variety of diagnostic instruments areavailable to assist the PMHNP with comprehensive data collection. Which of the following tools is considered an
―interviewer-based‖ tool designed as a guide to clinicians designed to help clarify answers to questions?
A. The Children’s Interview for Psychiatric Symptoms (ChIPS)
B. The Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents (DICA)
C. The Pictorial Instrument for Children and Adolescents (PICA-III-R)
D. The Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Assessment (CAPA)
D
Question 40
Minor physical anomalies, such as high-arched palate, low-set ears, and transverse palmar creases, occur in a higher than average distribution in children with all of the following except:
A. Learning disabilities
B. Speech and language disorders
C. Hyperactivity
D. Delayed puberty
D
Question 41
Mrs. Jacobs has accompanied her son to today’s session. Her son is in psychiatric care because he has developed disciplinary issues and for the last several months has been challenging authority, truant from school, and openly defiant of the household rules. Mrs. Jacobs is understandably distraught and is adamant that her son must be the victim of bullying because yesterday he came home from school with a black eye and a swollen lip. While this has never happened before, she believes that bullying is the only explanation for his behavior at home. While counseling Mrs. Jacobs about bullying, the PMHNP emphasizes that, by definition, bullying:
A. At some point will always involve physical aggression
B. Does not occur unless more than one aggressor participates
C. Is always unprovoked and intentionally cruel
D. Rarely results in permanent, irreversible physical harm
C
Question 42
Kelly is a 13-year-old girl who is being evaluated because her parents arevery concerned about her sudden disinterest in school. She does not want to go to any social activities and her grades have dropped markedly in the last several months. When considering bullying as a cause of her behavior change, the PMHP considers that which type of bullying is more common among girls?
A. Verbal
B. Physical
C. Relational
D. Cyber
C
Question 43
With respect to psychiatric assessment, the PMNHP knows that in terms of confidentiality:
A. All information related to a minor may be shared with the parents without the child’s consent.
B. Whenever there is a suspicion of neglect or abuse, the appropriate state agency must be notified.
C. Every state has laws that emancipate children for issues of mental health.
D. All children areentitled to confidentiality unless they area danger to themselves or others.
B
Question 44
The PMHNP is evaluating a 15-year-old male patient who has been referred by his court- appointed guardian. He has been in foster care for the last 6 years and maintained a steady pattern of low-level behavior problems such as skipping school and ignoring curfew. He is not openly defiant and has always been described as a ―loner.‖ He just does not follow most rules. During the mental status examination, the PMHNP notes that his expressions aresometimes inconsistent with the topic of conversation, and he does not seem to be able to transition effectively among levels of emotion. This represents an abnormality in:
A. Mood
B. Affect
C. Thought process and content
D. Judgment and insight
B
Question 45
The PMHNP is drafting a proposal for research funding for a project to offer primary prevention strategies designed to reduce the incidence of bullying. In support of this project, the PMHNP provides data supporting the fact that both perpetrators and victims of bullying suffer all of the following except:
A. Higher incidence of emotional problems
B. Greater difficulty making friends
C. Poorer academic achievement
D. Increased percentage of smoking
B
Question 46
Carolyn is a 14-year-old female who is in care because she has developed increasingly difficult behavior at home and school. She is inappropriately dressed for the interview, wearing heavy makeup and conducting herself in a suggestive manner. Her medical history is significant only for childhood asthma and four urinary tract infections in the last year. Carolyn’s mother reveals that Carolyn’s stepfather has a history of sexually
abusing his biological daughter, and the mother is beginning to wonder if something isn’t
―going on‖ in her own home. Carolyn vigorously denies this, and indicates that her stepfather is very good to her, takes care of her, and is her ―best friend.‖ The PMHNP recognizes that Carolyn may be in which phase of intrafamilial sexual abuse?
A. Engagement
B. Secrecy
C.
Disclosure
D. Suppression
B
Question 47
John is an 11-year-old male being evaluated for conduct disorder. His history is significant for setting fires in his neighbor’s garage, repeated episodes of truancy for the last 2 years, and three separate episodes of running away from home beginning when he was 8 years old. His teacher has reported that he is quite adept at manipulating his peers to get what he wants, and he has tried to do the same thing to her. His parents deny any concerns about anger. They arehaving a hard time believing that there is a problem because while John has a tendency to pursue dangerous activities, it seems more like it is just because he is bored. During interview, John does not seem at all hostile or angry.
Like his parents, he does not really seem to think anything is wrong. Which of John’s findings implies the greatest risk factor for severe, persistent conduct problems?
A. The fire setting
B. Running away beginning at age 8
C. His lack of guilt
D. Truancy prior to age 10
D
Question 48
The PMHNP is performing a series of court-ordered home visits to evaluate concerns about a 4-month-old infant who presented for a well checkup with clear failure to thrive. While observing the mother’s interaction with the infant, the PMHNP notes a negative pattern of interaction. This is characterized by:
A. The child refusing to feed and the mother feeling rejected and withdrawing
B. The mother not holding the child during feeding and the child withdrawing
C. The mother not responding to hunger cues, e.g., crying, and the child stopping demonstrating them
D. The mother being overly protective and trying to feed excessively, and the infant stopping eating
A
Question 49
Justin is a 3½ -year-old boy who comes in with his mother. She is concerned that he has obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Justin’s mother says that her husband has struggled with OCD all his life; he was first diagnosed when he was 11 years old thanks to an alert teacher who suggested mental health care. Justin’s mother has been very proactive in studying genetic risk, and she knows that Justin is at significantly increased risk due to the early-onset in his father. Which of the following behaviors by Justin would be most consistent with OCD?
A. Clear social difficulties in addition to an apparently unusual need for cleanliness and order in his bedroom
B. Refusal to go to bed without his blue stuffed elephant; this began over a year ago and is getting progressively worse
C. Insistence upon precise placement of plate, cup, utensils and food on plate when eating; when he cannot achieve this, he will not eat
D. A concomitant diagnosis of ADHD for which the family is currently in behavioral therapy
C
Question 50
The PMHNP is writing an article to increase awareness among pediatric primary care providers to those factors that may suggest higher than average risk for the development of childhood anxiety disorders. It is helpful to note that which of the following areneurophysiologic correlates between young children and anxiety disorders?
A. Delayed developmental milestones
B. Elevated resting heart rate
C. Pupillary constriction during cognitive tasks
D. Youngest child in birth order
B
Question 51
The PMHNP observes separation from and reunion with the parent as part the mental status exam of a 25-month-old toddler. Extremes of emotion during separation or reunion aremost consistent with:
A. Normal developmental progression at that age
B. Cognitive dysfunction
C. Neurologic dysfunction
D. Problems with the parent-child relationship
D
Question 52
Which of the following manifestations of childhood anxiety disorders is considered a psychiatric emergency?
A. School refusal
B. Bedtime refusal
C. Eating refusal
D. Speech refusal
A
Question 53
Eric is an 11-year-old male for whom an emergency assessment was requested due to fire-setting. This is not Eric’s first fire, and his parents admit that he has had a bit of a fixation with the fireplace and matches for a few years. During the evaluation, the PMHNP should be particularly alert to other findings consistent with:
A. Childhood schizophrenia
B. Bipolar disorder
C. Sexual abuse
D. Conduct disorder
D
Question 54
The PMHNP has been retained by the local school board to provide comprehensive counseling and guidance following an episode of tragic school violence. A 9th grader, acting alone, brought a gun into the school, fatally shooting a teacher and injuring four other teachers and students before he was subdued. In an effort to promote best healthy practices after this traumatic event, the school board is asking for advice on how to best manage the students. The PMHNP knows that the immediate priority must be:
A. Returning to normal routine immediately
B. Development of peer counseling groups
C. Establishing the perception of safety
D. A memorial service to process the loss
A
Question 55
Kelly is an 8-year-old girl who is being evaluated by the PMHNP because she is markedly behind her peers in school performance. During her mental status examination, she is unable to repeat three objects after five minutes, and is unable to repeat five digits forward or three digits backward. Further evaluation reveals an inability to add single digits. The PMHNP interprets this finding as:
A. Consistent with her developmental milestone expectations
B. A manifestation of profound anxiety
C. Reflective of brain damage or learning disabilities
D. Suggestive of an abnormality of thought process
C
Question 56
Michael is a 13-year-old boy who was involved in a traumatic automobile accident in which his mother, the driver, was killed. After suffering multiple injuries and weeks in the hospital, Michael was discharged to home with physical therapy. He ultimately made a complete physical recovery but is unable to get into a car. Just the thought of riding in a car produces profound physiologic symptoms. He has been diagnosed with post- traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). His avoidance of riding in a car is conceptualized as:
A. Panic attacks
B. Operant conditioning
C. Hyper arousal
D. Flashbacks
B
Question 57
The PMHNP is performing an emergency assessment [Show Less]