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Clinical Examination of the Psychiatric Patient

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Title: Clinical Examination of the Psychiatric Patient


1
Clinical Examination of the Psychiatric Patient
  • Jeff Baker, Ph.D.
  • Chief Psychologist
  • Anesthesiology, Cardiothoracic Surgery,
    Orthopaedic Spine Surgery, Adult Rehabilitation
    Unit

2
Interview of a Psychiatric Patient
  • Interviews explore the following factors
  • Genetic temperamental, biological,
    developmental, social, and psychological.

3
In Successful Interviews the OT
Communicates/Creates
  • Empathy Respect Competence Interest
  • Define
  • An atmosphere of trust that encourages the
    patient to talk honestly about his or her
    innermost feelings and thoughts.
  • How do we do that? Analyze This Chap 8
  • An opportunity for the patient to reveal the
    signs and symptoms that make up the potentially
    definable and treatable syndromes.
  • Possible ideas?

4
In Successful Interviews the OT
Communicates/Creates Continued
  • Basic techniques of interviewing that work for
    most patients.
  • Name them / Basic Ins Chap 4
  • Must be prepared to interview a wide range of
    patients.
  • Open Mind about individual and group differences
    is what makes life so interesting.
  • What happens to the provider if not

5
Depressed and Potentially Suicidal Patients
  • Depressed patients are often unable to provide an
    adequate account of their illness spontaneously
    because of such factors as psychomotor
    retardation and hopelessness. Girl I Chap 1
  • Need to ask history and symptoms related to
    depression including suicidal ideation.

6
Depressed and Potentially Suicidal Patients
  • Typical symptoms include feelings of
    hopelessness, sleep disturbance, appetite change,
    concentration problems, lack of energy or problem
    solving.
  • SIS Chapter 10 / Girl I Chap 1

7
Suicidality
  • Evaluating Suicide potential is imperative when
    interviewing any depressed patient.
  • Inquire about suicidal thoughts Are you
    suicidal now, or do you have plans to take your
    own life?
  • Other risk factors suicide note, family hx of
    suicide, or previous suicidal behavior, evidence
    of impulsivity or of pervasive pessimism about
    the future also places the patient at higher risk
    for suicide.

8
Suicidality
  • If no immediate plan but the clinician still
    feels the patient is at risk, a contract or plan
    should be agreed upon with the patient written
    contract, ask family members to assist and agree
    to monitor the patient, ER resource, local MHMR
    resource, 800 crisis hotline resource, clinic
    phone number are all preventative techniques in
    suicide.

9
Aggressive Patients
  • Similar approach as suicide should be taken with
    aggressive patients.
  • Assure the patient you can assist them in
    managing their behavior through the interview.
  • Must establish whether effective verbal contact
    can be made with the patient or whether the
    patients sense of reality is so impaired that
    effective interviewing is impossible.

10
Aggressive Patients Continued
  • May have to medicate the patient before the
    interview begins.
  • Have to make the decision whether it is safe to
    remove restraints.
  • With or without restraints a violent patient
    should not be interviewed alone.
  • Other precautions include leaving the door open
    and sitting between the patient and the door.

11
Aggressive Patients Continued
  • Must make it clear that the patient may say or
    feel anything but is NOT free to act in a violent
    way.
  • OT must remain calm, and have additional staff
    able to maintain control, by physical means if
    necessary.
  • Confrontation is to be avoided.
  • The interviewer should respect as much as
    possible the patients need for space.
  • Questions need to be asked regarding previous
    acts of violence, violence experienced as a
    child, under what specific conditions the patient
    resorts to violence, with corroboration from
    friends and family members.
  • AGAIG Chap 2 (Verbal aggression)

12
Delusional Patients
  • The patients delusions should never be directly
    challenged.
  • Challenging only increases a patients anxiety
    and often leads the threatened patient to defend
    the belief ever more desperately.
  • It is also inadvisable to believe the patients
    delusion.

13
Delusional Patients Continued
  • The OT can help by indicating that he or she
    understands that the patient believes the
    delusion to be true but that the OT does not hold
    the same belief.
  • Focus on the feelings, fears, and hopes that
    underlie the delusional belief to understand the
    delusions particular function.

14
Delusional Patients Continued
  • Delusions may be excessively fixed, immutable,
    and chronic, or they may be subject to question
    and doubt by a patient and may last only a
    relatively brief time.
  • A patient may or may not be influenced by the
    delusional beliefs and may be able to recognize
    their effects.
  • OFOTCN Chapter 4

15
Case
  • A man with chronic schizophrenia revealed the
    simple delusion that his ultimate mission in life
    was to raise the dead to herald the coming of a
    new age. He denied ever seeing signs in his
    environment that referred to his mission, nor did
    he have auditory hallucinations telling him about
    it.

16
Case Continued
  • The delusion persisted as an isolated psychotic
    symptom during long, quiescent phases of his
    disorder. The delusion appeared during his
    schizophrenic exacerbations, at which times the
    patient had many other complicated and bizarre
    psychotic ideas.

17
Case Continued
  • During the chronic phases of his disorder, the
    patient worked at low-level jobs and had a few
    ongoing but superficial relationships. The
    patients behavior in no way revealed the
    presence of his delusion.

18
Psychiatric History
  • Identifying data
  • age, marital status, ethnicity, gender, children,
    etc.
  • Chief complaint and problem
  • Can you tell me why you are here?
  • Present Illness
  • Onset
  • Precipitating factors

19
Psychiatric History Continued
  • Past Illness
  • Psychiatric
  • Medical
  • Alcohol and other substance history.
  • Personal History
  • Prenatal and perinatal
  • Early childhood (through age 3)
  • Middle childhood (ages3-11)
  • Late childhood (puberty through adolescence)

20
Psychiatric History Continued
  • Adulthood
  • Occupational history
  • Marital and relationship history
  • Military History
  • Educational history
  • Religion
  • Social activity
  • Current living situation
  • Legal history
  • Sexual history
  • Family history
  • Fantasies and dreams

21
Difficult Patients to Interview(Behavioral
Characteristics)
  • Histrionic (BI Chap 12)
  • Obssessive (AGAIG Chap 3)
  • Dependent (OFOTCN Chap 2)
  • Malingering (OFOTCN Chap 3)
  • Sociopath (AThis Chap 8)
  • Psychopath (SOTL Chap 11)
  • Others

22
Interviewing
  • Practice Interviews
  • Role Plays

23
Referrals
  • Make sure you identify possible resources for the
    patient such as a 1 800 hotline or reminding them
    of the ER, PCP, and local MH/MR.
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