The exam will consist of 50 multiple choice questions. The following are items that should be
studied as part of your review and will be on the quiz:
1.
... [Show More] DSM 5 classification of Psychiatric illness.
The DSM-5 is a diagnostic manual. It does not provide theories of cause, management, or
treatment options. It lists 22 major categories of mental disorders with more than 150 individual
illnesses. The DSM-5 is organized in an attempt to follow the lifespan with neurodevelopmental
disorders that occur early in life listed first and neurocognitive disorders that occur at the end of
life listed last. It is organized this way to assist the diagnostic decision-making process.
PER MODULE MATERIAL: When working with the DSM-5 the PMH-APRN must remember
that normal reactions to stressful events are not considered mental disorders. The DSM-5
conceptualizes each of the mental disorders as a clinically significant behavioral or psychological
syndrome or pattern that occurs in an individual and is associated with present distress (e.g., a
painful symptom), disability (i.e., impairment in one or more important areas of functioning), or
with a significantly increased risk of suffering death, pain, disability, or an important loss of
freedom (APA, 2013). This syndrome or pattern must not be merely an expected and transient
response to a particular event, such as the death of a loved one. Whatever its original causes, the
behavior must currently be considered a manifestation of a behavioral, ppsychological, or
biological dysfunction to be classified as a mental disorder. Deviant behaviors (e.g., political,
religious, or sexual) and conflicts between the individual and society are not considered mental
orders per se, but if the deviance or conflict is a symptom of dysfunction in the individual, then it
may be considered a symptom of the illness.
2. Scope and standards of Practice:
Scope of practice:
● Define NP roles and actions
● Identifies competencies assumed to be held by all NPs who function in a particular role
● Varies broadly from state to state
● Advanced practice PMHNP standards are identified in Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing: Scope
and Standards of Practice
Standard of Practice
● Authoritative statements regarding the quality and type of practice that should be provided
● Provide a way to judge the nature of care provided
● Reflect the expectation for the care that should be provided to clients with various illnesses
● Reflect professional agreement focused on the minimum levels of acceptable performance
● Can be used to legally describe the standard of care that must be met by a provider
● May be precise protocols that must be followed or more general guidelines that recommend
actions
3. Purpose of the Psychiatric Interview: is to gather information necessary to understand, diagnose,
and treat the client. Per textbook (Perese)-The purpose of the psychiatric interview are to
understand the patient’s illness to evaluate the effect of the illness on the patient’s life and create a
beginning diagnosis and treatment plan.
4. Therapeutic alliance: The clinician uses his or her therapeutic self-calm, warm, understanding,
kind, respectful, concerned, and focused to create a therapeutic alliance. It is through the
therapeutic alliance in the context of an ongoing relationship that the clinician is able to help the
patient change. The patient has likely had questions in his or her mind and since deciding to seek
help such as “Will I be safe or threatened, or will I be rejected?” and “Can this person help me?”
-An important part in building a therapeutic relationship is to help the patient feel accepted.
Regardless of the patient’s actual presentation, the clinician should assume that the patient is
anxious and seek to maintain the anxiety within workable limits. The clinician needs to
demonstrate empathy which is the ability to understand what the patient feels, by using
empathetic statements such as “It sounds to me as if you have been feeling some very painful
emotions.”
-Important components of therapeutic alliance:
1. The therapist and patient work collaboratively to create therapeutic change through an
affectionate bond
2. Agreement on goals of therapy
3. The therapist’s ability to be empathetic and involved in therapy
4. The ability of the patient to do the work of therapy [Show Less]