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Title: Mental Health Nursing II NURS 2310


1
Mental Health Nursing IINURS 2310
  • Unit II
  • Growth and Development in Mental Health

2
Objective 1
  • Reviewing Maslows Hierarchy of Needs

3
(No Transcript)
4
Objective 2
  • Exploring the concepts and theories associated
    with personality development

5
  • Personality The combination of character,
    behavioral, temperamental, emotional, and mental
    traits that is unique to each specific
    individual.
  • Temperament Inborn personality characteristics
    that influence an individuals manner of reacting
    to the environment, and ultimately his or her
    developmental progression.

6
Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Freud believed an individuals basic character is
  • formed by the age of 5, and includes these
  • components
  • Id
  • Instinctual drives
  • Ego
  • Mediator
  • Superego
  • Ego Ideal
  • internalized value system
  • Consciousness

7
Theory of Psychosocial Development
  • Erikson studied the influence of social processes
    on the development of the personality
  • Individuals struggle with developmental crises
    throughout the life cycle
  • Specific tasks in each stage must be completed
    for emotional growth to occur

8
Objective 3
  • Reviewing Eriksons Stages of Development

9
Stage 1Trust vs. Mistrust
  • Age Birth to 18 months
  • Major Task Develop a sense of trust in others
  • Mastery Trust in people and the environment
  • Characteristics Social attachment
  • Concerns Emotional dissatisfaction,
    suspiciousness, difficulty with interpersonal
    relationships

10
Stage 2Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
  • Age 18 months to 3 years
  • Major Task Learn self-control
  • Mastery Pride in self
  • Characteristics Self-control, language
    development, fantasy play
  • Concerns Lack of self-confidence, lack of pride
    in the ability to perform, a sense of being
    controlled by others, rage against self

11
Stage 3Initiative vs. Guilt
  • Age 3 to 6 years
  • Major Task Initiate spontaneous activities
  • Mastery Able to initiate activities and enjoy
    learning
  • Characteristics Early moral development,
    self-esteem, group play, egocentrism
  • Concerns Feelings of inadequacy and guilt,
    accepting of liability in situations for which
    individual is not responsible

12
Stage 4Industry vs. Inferiority
  • Age 6 to 12 years
  • Major Task Develop necessary social skills
  • Mastery Acquire skills for, and develop
    competence in, work
  • Characteristics Friendship, skill learning,
    self-evaluation, team play
  • Concerns Difficulty in interpersonal
    relationships caused by feelings of inadequacy

13
Stage 5Identity vs. Role Confusion
  • Age 12 to 20 years
  • Major Task Integrate childhood experiences into
    a personal identity
  • Mastery Strong group identity, readiness to plan
    for the future
  • Characteristics Physical maturation, sexual
    relationships, membership in peer group
  • Concerns Self-consciousness, doubt, and
    confusion about ones role in life

14
Stage 6Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • Age 20 to 30 years
  • Major Task Develop commitments to others and to
    a career
  • Mastery Form close relationships and share with
    others
  • Characteristics Stable relationships,
    childbearing, work
  • Concerns Withdrawal, social isolation, inability
    to form lasting relationships

15
Stage 7Generativity vs. Stagnation
  • Age 30 to 65 years
  • Major Task Establish a family and become
    productive
  • Mastery Nurturing children or helping the next
    generation in other ways
  • Characteristics Nurturing of close
    relationships, managing career/household
  • Concerns Lack of concern for the welfare of
    others, total preoccupation with self

16
Stage 8Integrity vs. Despair
  • Age 65 years and older
  • Major Task View ones life as meaningful and
    fulfilling
  • Mastery Sense of fulfillment about life, sense
    of unity with self and others
  • Characteristics Promote intellectual vigor,
    redirect energy to new roles and activities
  • Concerns Self-contempt and disgust with how life
    has progressed

17
Objective 4
  • Recalling the major
  • functions controlled by
  • various areas of the brain

18
Cerebrum
  • Frontal lobes
  • voluntary body movement
  • movements that control speaking, thinking, and
    judgment formation
  • Parietal lobes
  • perception interpretation of most sensory
    information
  • touch, pain, taste, and body position
  • Temporal lobes
  • auditory functions
  • short-term memory
  • Occipital lobes
  • visual reception and interpretation

19
Diencephalon
  • Thalamus
  • integrates all sensory input except smell
  • Hypothalamus
  • regulates the pituitary gland
  • regulates appetite and temperature
  • Limbic system
  • associated with fear, anxiety, anger, aggression,
    love, joy, hope, sexuality, and social behavior

20
Mesencephalon
  • integration of reflexes (visual, auditory,
  • righting)
  • Pons
  • respiration
  • skeletal muscle tone
  • Medulla
  • regulates heart rate, blood pressure, and
  • respiration
  • swallowing, sneezing, coughing, vomiting
  • reflexes

21
Cerebellum
  • involuntary movement, such as the
  • coordination/maintenance of posture
  • Neurotransmitters
  • essential functions of human emotion and
  • behavior
  • many psychotropics work here
  • categories of neurotransmitters include
  • cholinergics, monoamines, amino acids,
  • and neuropeptides

22
Neurotransmitters (contd)
  • Cholinergics
  • Acetylcholine
  • 1st chemical to be identified as neurotransmitter
  • involved in disorders of motor behavior and
    memory
  • Monoamines
  • Norepinephrine
  • fight-or-flight syndrome
  • Dopamine
  • physical activation of the body
  • Serotonin
  • levels dictate heightened or lowered sense of
    arousal

23
Neurotransmitters (contd)
  • Amino Acids
  • Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
  • decreased levels in anxiety and movement
    disorders
  • Huntingtons disease, epilepsy
  • Glutamate
  • decreased receptor activity can induce psychotic
    behavior
  • Neuropeptides
  • Somatostatin
  • low concentrations in Alzheimers disease

24
Autonomic Nervous System
  • Sympathetic nervous system
  • dominant during stressful situations
  • fight-or-flight response
  • increases cardiac and respiratory activity, and
    decreases GI functioning
  • involves acetylcholine and norephinephrine
  • Parasympathetic nervous system
  • dominant in the nonstressful or relaxed state
  • promotes efficient GI functioning
  • maintains heart and respirations at resting rate
  • involves acetylcholine

25
Objective 5
  • Reviewing diagnostic procedures used to detect
    altered brain function

26
  • Electroencephalography (EEG)
  • measures brain electrical activity
  • detects dysrhythmias, asymmetries, and
    suppression of brain rhythms
  • epilepsy, metabolic disorder, degenerative
    disease
  • Computed tomographic (CT) scan
  • measures accuracy of brain structure
  • identifies anatomical differences
  • schizophrenia, organic mental disorders, bipolar
    disorder

27
  • Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
  • measures anatomical and biochemical status of
    various segments of the brain
  • detects changes in myelination
  • schizophrenia
  • Positron emission tomography (PET)
  • measures specific brain activity and functioning
  • identifies problems with blood flow, oxygen
    utilization, glucose metabolism, and
    neurotransmitter/receptor interaction

28
Objective 6
  • Discussing commonly used physiological and
    psychological tests utilized in evaluating the
    function of the brain

29
Physiological Tests
  • Basic Metabolic Profile (BMP)
  • electrolytes
  • glucose
  • Complete Blood Chemistry (CBC)
  • Thyroid Panel
  • Urinalysis

30
Mental Status Examination (MSE)
  • Describes all areas of mental functioning
  • Appearance
  • Mood and affect
  • Speech and language
  • Thought content
  • Perceptual disturbances
  • Insight and judgment
  • Sensorium
  • Memory and attention
  • General intellectual level

31
Objective 7
  • Reviewing the steps of the nursing process in the
    psychiatric/mental health setting

32
  • The Nursing Process
  • Provides a systematic framework for the delivery
    of nursing care
  • Consists of six steps
  • Uses a problem-solving approach
  • Accepted as nursings scientific methodology

33
  • Assessment a systematic, dynamic process by
    which the nurse, through interaction with the
    client, significant others, and health care
    providers, collects and analyzes data about the
    client.
  • Data may include the following dimensions
  • -- Physical -- Psychological
  • -- Sociocultural -- Spiritual
  • -- Functional Abilities -- Cognitive
  • -- Developmental -- Economic
  • -- Lifestyle

34
  • Diagnosis clinical judgments about individual,
    family, or community responses to actual or
    potential health problems and/or life processes.
  • A nursing diagnosis provides the basis for
    selection of nursing interventions to achieve
    outcomes for which the nurse is accountable.
  • Outcome Identification measurable, expected,
    patient-focused goals that translate into
    observable behaviors.

35
  • Planning developed by the nurse and negotiated
    among the patient, nurse, family, and health care
    team prescribes evidence-based interventions to
    attain expected outcomes.
  • Implementation putting in place interventions
    identified in the plan of care.
  • Evaluation the process of determining both the
    clients progress toward the attainment of
    expected outcomes and the effectiveness of
    nursing care.

36
  • In the psychiatric/mental health setting
  • Nursing care is always goal-directed
  • Nursing diagnoses are prioritized according to
    life-threatening potential
  • Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
  • Concept mapping
  • Documentation
  • SOAP notes
  • SBAR charting
  • DAR (data/action/response)

37
Objective 8
  • Describing the nurses role in psychiatric
    evaluation

38
  • Assessment
  • Observation
  • Thought processes
  • Behaviors
  • 11
  • Mood scale
  • Subjective data
  • Diagnosis (NANDA)
  • Evaluation
  • Documentation
  • Treatment planning

39
Objective 9
  • Examining documentation practices of the
    psychiatric/mental health nurse

40
  • Problem-oriented recording (SOAPIE)
  • Subjective data information gathered from what
    the client, family, or other source has said or
    reported
  • Objective data information gathered by direct
    observation
  • Assessment nurses interpretation of the
    subjective and objective data
  • Plan actions/treatment to be carried out
  • Intervention nursing actions actually carried
    out
  • Evaluation assessment of the problem following
    nursing interventions

41
  • Focus charting (DAR and AIR)
  • Data information that supports the focus or
    describes pertinent observations
  • Action nursing actions that address the focus
  • Response description of clients response to
    any part of the medical or nursing care
  • _____________________________________
  • Assessment observations about the client
  • Intervention nursing actions that address the
    observations
  • Response clients response to actions

42
Objective 10
  • Defining the DSM-IV-TR and identifying its
    relevance to psychiatric nursing practice

43
Defining the DSM-V
  • The DSM-V is a handbook for mental health
    professionals that lists different categories of
    mental disorders and the criteria for diagnosing
    them
  • The manual has been revised six times since its
    inception
  • Organizes each psychiatric diagnosis according to
    different aspects of a specific disorder or
    disability

44
Relevance to Nursing Practice
  • Provides uniformity and consistency in
    psychiatric diagnoses
  • Groups diagnoses by characteristics according to
    specific criteria
  • Allows health care team to provide treatment
    based on diagnostic classification
  • Used by the nurse to organize patient care and
    determine appropriate priority psychiatric
    nursing diagnosis
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