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Behavioral Therapy

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Title: Behavioral Therapy


1
  • Behavioral Therapy
  • Behavioral therapy is based on the assumption
    that changes in maladaptive behavior can occur
    without insight into the underlying cause
  • It works best when it is directed at specific
    problems the goals are well defined
  • Modeling
  • The therapist provides a role model for specific
    identified behaviors, the cl learns through
    imitation.
  • They demonstrate to cl patterns of behaving that
    might prove more effective than those the cl
    usually engage in then have the cl practice
    these new behaviors
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Is the basis for behavior modification uses
    () reinforcement to increase desired behaviors.
  • Systematic Desensitization
  • Systematic desensitization is another form of
    behavior modification therapy that involves the
    development of behavioral tasks customized to the
    cls specific fears these tasks are presented to
    the cl while he or she is using learned
    relaxation techniques.
  • The cls fear is broken down into its components
    by exploring the particular stimulus cues to
    which the cl reacts.
  • Pairing of a maladaptive behavior with a noxious
    stimulus, so that anxiety or fear becomes
    associated with the once-pleasurable stimulus
  • Punishment
  • Avoidance training
  • Biofeedback, which is also a form of behavioral
    therapy is successfully used today, especially
    for controlling the bodys physiological response
    to stress anxiety.
  • Milieu
  • To describe his use of the total environment to
    treat disturbed children.
  • Is sometimes a difficult concept to grasp
  • It is an all-inclusive term that recognizes the
    people, setting structure, emotional climate as
    all important to healing

2
  • Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Managed Care
    Issues
  • What is psychiatric mental health nursing
  • Psychiatric mental health nurses work with
    children, adolescents, adults, the elderly.
  • Psychiatric nurses work with individuals,
    couples, families, groups
  • They work with cls in hospitals, in their homes,
    in halfway houses, in shelters, in clinics, in
    storefronts, on the streetvirtually everywhere.
  • Phenomena of concern because of the diversity of
    cls.
  • Psychiatric nursing as the diagnosis and t/ of
    human responses to actual or potential mental
    health problems.
  • Nursing outcomes classification (NOC) is one
    reference that provides a comprehensive list of
    standardized outcomes, definitions, measures to
    describe cl outcomes influenced by nursing
    practice.
  • Nursing interventions Classification (NIC) is
    another tool to define measure nursing care
  • A clinical judgment knowledge, that a nurse
    performs to enhance cl outcomes, including
    direct and indirect care through a series of
    nursing activities.
  • Evidence-based practice that is, care based on
    the collection, interpretation integration of
    valid, important, applicable cli-observed,
    research-derived evidence.
  • Levels of psychiatric mental health clinical
    nursing practice
  • Basic Level
  • The nurse at the basic level has completed a
    nursing program passed the state licensure
    examination.
  • Basic level registered nurse is a baccalaureate
    RN may take a basic certification examination
    sponsored by the ANA through its credentialing
    center to demonstrate clinical competence
  • Counseling, Milieu therapy, promotion of
    self-care activities, psychobiological
    interventions, health teaching, case management,
    health promotion health maintenance
  • Advanced Level
  • Advanced practice RNpsychiatric mental health
    (APRN-PMH) is a licensed RN with a masters
    degree in psychiatric nursing
  • this clinician is eligible to take an advanced
    certification examination, which adds another
    credential to the nurses title

3
  • Mental Health Managed Care
  • Managed care is the dominant form of health care
  • The goal of managed care is to provide
    coordination of all health services at the
    appropriate level of care, with an emphasis on
    preventive care, to control costs.
  • Health maintenance organization provide
    comprehensive services to members only within a
    defined provider network for a fixed yearly rate,
    usually a primary care physician as the
    gatekeeper for specialty care
  • Preferred provider organizations give members a
    choice of using providers in a defined network
    for a fixed copayment or using providers outside
    the network for a higher copayment.
  • Managed behavioral health care organizations
    (MBHOs) were developed separately, or carved
    out, from medical services
  • Hospital stays were shortened or admission
    denied, outpatient options were enhanced
  • Partial hospitalization programs, intensive
    outpatient t/, assertive community t/,
    psychiatric home care, school-based services.
  • The quality of nursing documentation plays a
    direct role in ensuring that clients receive
    necessary care.
  • Future Challenges Roles for Nurses
  • Case Management is an integral part of
    psychiatric home care for the elderly, in-home
    services for children adolescents, long-term
    t/ of the chronically mentally ill.
  • Community nursing centers will hopefully survive
    to serve low-income uninsured people as long as
    they can secure funding.
  • Three more significant trends will affect the
    future of psychiatric nursing the aging of the
    population, increasing cultural diversity,
    ever-expanding technology.
  • Nurse as client advocate must continue to
    evolve.
  • Nurse has the responsibility to communicate to
    the cl to uphold the cls rights.

4
  • Mental Health Nursing in Acute Care Settings
  • Although lengths of stay have decreased from
    weeks to days since 1980s, the inpatient setting
    provides intensive effective t/ for the
    acutely ill cl.
  • Admission therefore is commonly reserved for
    those conditions that require immediate
    assessment, stabilization, s/ management
  • Most inpatient t/ today takes place in private
    general hospitals or psychiatric hospitals
  • State psychiatric hospitals that exist as a
    resource for the uninsured and for specialty
    populations, such as forensic cls referred for
    evaluation or t/ by the court system.
  • Admission Goals
  • Admission may be planned, it is common for a cl
    to enter t/ through a psychiatric crisis center
    that is located in the admissions area or is part
    of emergency department services.
  • Most managed behavioral health care organization
    (MBHOs) other third-party payers require that
    at least one of the following criteria be met to
    justify admission
  • Clear risk of the cls danger to self or others
  • Dangerous decomposition of a cl under long-term
    t/
  • Failure of community-based t/ with a clearly
    demonstrable need for more intensive structured
    t/ to avoid harmful consequences.
  • Mental need, either unassociated with
    psychiatric t/ or associated with t/
  • Goals for acute psychiatric hospitalization
  • Prevention of self-harm to the cl
  • Prevention of crisis with a return to
    community-based services
  • Initiation or modification of a psychotropic
    medication regimen for cls requiring careful
    titration or observation
  • Brief, specific problem solving that is designed
    to enable the cl to gain or regain a state of
    compensation
  • Rapid establishment of a plan for outpatient
    therapy, especially referral to a partial
    hospitalization program that provides intensive
    daily services.
  • Rights of the Hospitalized Client

5
  • Interdisciplinary Teamwork Care Management
  • Cls care is planned implemented by a team
    composed of nurses, social workers, counselors,
    psychologists, occupational activity
    therapists, psychiatrists, medical physicians,
    mental health workers, pharmacists, other
    members of the hospitals health care team,
    according to the cls needs
  • Members of each discipline are responsible for
    gathering data participating in the planning of
    care.
  • medical problems are usually referred to a
    primary care physician or specialist, who assess
    the cl consults with the unit physicians
  • Members of the various disciplines meet within
    72 hrs to formulate or select a plan of care that
    reflects the consensus of the team.
  • Multidisciplinary t/ plan or a clinical pathway
    used by some organizations, seek to standardize
    the daily expected outcomes for cl
  • The reduction of overt s/ development of an
    adequate outpatient plan signal that discharge is
    imminent.
  • Psychiatric Case Management
  • Has been defined as any systematic program that
    coordinates individual patient care throughout
    the organizationally defined continuum of
    services settings
  • Inpatient setting, case managers on the hospital
    team communicate daily or weekly
  • In the community, ideally, psychiatric case
    managers establish enduring relationships with
    cl, facilitate their involvement in outpatient
    settings, access resources, thereby helping to
    avoid the crises that result in readmission to
    the acute care hospital
  • Nursing on the inpatient unit
  • Management
  • Nurses assume the bulk of the management of the
    daily functioning of the inpatient mental health
    unit.
  • Program staff may provide social services,
    activities, occupational therapy, specialized
    counseling services.
  • Nurse manager is responsible for an awareness of
    the safety of the unit, its effectiveness in the
    delivery of services, the degree to which the
    components of the health care team are
    integrating their services well.
  • Therapeutic Strategies
  • Informal contacts can be viewed as more
    significant than the formal ones, because they
    occur during natural activities of daily social
    living are therefore based on reality.
  • Nurses are prepared educationally with
    psychosocial communication skills to help cls
    feel heard supported, develop trust increased
    feelings of safety, receive feedback, learn
    more adaptive coping skills

6
  • Milieu
  • Group Activities
  • Experienced mental health nurses conduct
    specific, structured activities involving the
    therapeutic community, special groups, or
    families on most mental health units.
  • Community meetings may be held daily or at other
    scheduled times of the week.
  • Group therapy addresses communication sharing,
    helps cls explore life problems decrease their
    isolation anxiety, engages cls in the
    recovery process
  • Management of Milieu
  • On an inpatient unit, nursing is the discipline
    primarily responsible for maintenance of a
    therapeutic milieu
  • Reports from shift to shift provide info on the
    emotional climate level of tension on the unit.
  • To maintain an atmosphere in which healing
    growth can take place, nurses strive to keep
    communitively honest
  • Verbal messages must be clear or must also be
    congruent with verbal messages
  • therapeutic milieu operates on the understanding
    that the community can serve as a real-life
    training ground for learning about self for
    practicing communication coping skills in
    preparation for a return to the community outside
    the hospital.
  • Safety
  • Psychiatric mental health nurse assumes a
    responsibility for ongoing vigilance regarding
    safety hazards
  • The nurse must supervise the units systems for
    tracking which cl are on or off the unit for
    tracking which cls are on or off the unit for
    performing periodic or constant checks on those
    cls at risk of harming themselves or others
  • Violence disruption must be minimized while
    maintaining an atmosphere that promotes healthy
    appropriate expression of anger other feelings
  • Elopement (escape) of cls must be prevented, but
    in a way that avoids an atmosphere of
    imprisonment.
  • Documentation
  • Documentation of cl progress is the
    responsibility of the entire mental health team.
  • Although communication among team members
    coordination of services are the primary goals.

7
  • Psychopharmacological Responsibilities
  • Nurses on the inpatient acute care unit.
  • Both detection prevention of medical illnesses
    are compromised by cls reluctance to seek t/,
    poor communication skills, denial lack of
    awareness of health status
  • Anxiety, lack of trust, or thought impairment
    may cause cls to resist procedures such as
    measurement of VS.
  • As the therapeutic relationship develops, cls
    become more tolerant of physical interventions,
    the nurse may begin to address physical health
    status
  • Safe administration of medications monitoring
    of their effects is a 24-hr responsibility of the
    nurse
  • Detailed knowledge of psychoactive medications
    of the interactions psychological side effects
    of others medications is expected of mental
    nurses
  • Nurses observations of the expected adverse
    effects of medications provide data necessary for
    daily medication decisions by the psychiatrist
    t/ team.
  • Documentation for administering each prn
    medication must include the rationale for its use
    the effects.
  • Crisis Management
  • Nurses anticipate, prevent, manage emergencies
    crises on the unit.
  • These crises may be of a medical or behavioral
    nature.
  • Nurses must maintain their cardiopulmonary
    resuscitation skills be able to use basic
    emergency equipment
  • Behavioral crises can lead to cl violence toward
    self or others
  • Crisis prevention management techniques are
    practiced by staff in most mental health
    facilities
  • To psychiatric emergencies called codes. Each
    member of the team takes part in the team effort
    to defuse a crisis in its early stages.
  • The nurse also advocates for cls by ensuring
    that their legal rights are preserved, no matter
    how difficult their behavior may be for the staff
    to manage.
  • Preparation for Discharge to the community
  • Nurses assist cls their families to prepare
    for independent or assisted living in the
    community.

8
  • Mental Health Nursing in Community Settings
  • Context for psychiatric nursing in the community
  • In 1963, Community Mental Health Centers Act,
    thus solidifying the shift of mental health care
    from the institution to the community heralding
    the era of deinstitutionalization
  • Policy-makers believed that community care would
    be more humane less expensive than the historic
    hospital-based care.
  • Caring for seriously mentally ill (also called
    chronically mentally ill) cls in the community,
    however presented many challenges.
  • With advances in psychopharmacology
    psychosocial ts/, levels of psychiatric care in
    the community have multiplied into a continuum
    with many choices.
  • Aspects of Community Nursing
  • Community setting requires flexibility on the
    part of the psychiatric nurse knowledge about a
    broad array of community resources.
  • Setting is the realm of the cl rather than of
    the health care provider.
  • T/ in the community permits cls those involved
    in their support to learn new ways of coping w/
    s/ or situational difficulites.
  • Psychiatric Nursing Assessment Strategies
  • Assessment of the biopsychosocial needs
    capacities of cls living in the community
    requires expansion of the general psychiatric
    nursing assessment.
  • Four key elements of this assessment are
    strongly related to the probability that the cl
    will experience successful outcomes in the
    community.
  • Problems in any of these areas require immediate
    attention before other t/ goals are pursued
  • housing adequacy stability income source of
    income, Substance abuse history current use
  • Individual cultural characteristics of cls are
    also very important to assess.
  • Psychiatric Nursing Intervention Strategies
  • In the hospital setting, the focus of care is on
    stabilization, as defined by staff
  • In the community setting, t/ goals
    interventions are negotiated rather than imposed
    on the cl

9
  • Biopsychosocial Care Manager
  • Role of the community psychiatric RN includes
    the coordination of mental health, physical
    health, spiritual health, social service,
    educational service, vocational realms of care
    for the mental health cl.
  • Case management includes the following
    functions assessing cl needs developing a plan
    for service linking the cl with necessary
    services advocating for the cl, as needed.
  • Nurses are in a position to help the cl to
    manage medication, recognize side effects, be
    aware of the interactions among drugs prescribed
    for physical illness mental illness.
  • Community Settings
  • Nurses are providing primary mental health care
    at therapeutic day care centers, schools, partial
    hospitalization programs, shelters.
  • Basic Practice Counseling, promotion of
    self-care activities, psychobiological
    interventions, health teaching, case management.
  • Continuum of psychiatric mental health t/
  • Movement along the continuum is fluid, from
    higher to lower levels of intensity, changes
    are not necessarily step by step.
  • It is also notable that cls may pass through the
    continuum of t/ in the reverse direction that
    is, if s/ exacerbate, a lower intensity service
    may refer the cl temporarily to a higher level of
    care in an attempt to prevent total
    decompensation hospitalization.
  • Partial Hospital Program
  • Partial hospitalization programs (PHPs) offer
    intensive, short-term t/ similar to an inpatient
    level of care, except that the cl is able to
    return home each day.
  • Criteria for referral to a PHP include the need
    for prevention of hospitalization for serious
    s/or step-down from acute inpatient t/ the
    presence of a responsible relative or caregiver
    who can assure the cls safety.
  • Referrals come from inpatient or outpatient
    providers.
  • Psychiatric Home Care
  • Requiring 4 elements 1) home-bound status of
    the cl, 2) presence of a psychiatric diagnosis,
    3) need for the skills of a psychiatric RN , 4)
    development of a plan of care under orders of a
    physician.
  • Homebound refers to the cls inability to leave
    home independently to access community mental
    health care because of physical or mental
    conditions/
  • Cls are referred to psychiatric home care
    following an acute inpatient episode, either
    psychiatric or somatic, or to prevent
    hospitalization.
  • Psychiatric RN visits the cl 1 to 2 mo,
    usually sees 5 or 6 cls daily.

10
  • Assertive Community Treatment
  • Teams or mobile t/ units have sprung up in
    various area throughout the US to respond to
    those mentally ill cls who cannot effectively use
    traditional pursue woo cls support t/ in
    whatever settings cls find themselves inat home
    or in a public place
  • Creative problem solving interventions are
    hallmarks of care provided by mobile teams
  • Cls are referred to ACT teams by inpatient or
    outpatient providers because of a pattern of
    repeated hospitalizations with severe s/, along
    with an inability to participate in traditional
    t/.
  • Length of t/ may extend to yrs, until the cl is
    ready to accept transfer to a more structured
    site for care
  • There is a 24-hr on-call system.
  • Community Mental Health Center
  • For those who have no access to private care.
  • Generally they provide emergency services,
    childrens services
  • T/ include medication administration, individual
    therapy, psychoeducational therapy groups,
    family therapy, dual-diagnosis t/
  • A clinic may also be aligned with a psychosocial
    rehabilitation program that offers a structured
    day program, vocational services, residential
    services
  • Multidisciplinary team sees one to four times
    per month
  • Referred to the clinic for long-term follow-up
    by inpatient units or other providers of
    outpatient care at higher intensity levels.
  • Cls may attend the clinic for years or be
    discharged when they improve reach desired
    goals.
  • Ethical Issues
  • Ethical dilemmas are common in disciplines
    specialties that care for the vulnerable
    disenfranchised.
  • Role of the nurse is to act in the best
    interests of the cl society, to the degree that
    this is possible
  • In most organization, there is a designated
    resource for consultation regarding ethical
    dilemmas
  • Future Issues

11
  • Legal Ethical Guidelines for Safe Practice
  • Ethical dilemma (a situation that requires a
    choice between morally conflicting alternatives)
  • The fundamental goal in resolving any legal or
    ethical issue confronting the nurse in a
    psychiatric setting is striking a balance between
    the rights of the individual cl and the rights of
    society at large.
  • Ethical Concepts
  • Ethics is the study of philosophical beliefs
    about what is considered right or wrong in a
    society
  • term bioethics is used in relation to ethical
    dilemmas surrounding cl care.
  • Five principles of bioethics are
  • Beneficence is the duty to act so as to benefit
    or promote the good of others
  • Autonomy is the right to make ones own
    decisions
  • Justice is treating others fairly equally
  • Fidelity (nonmaleficence) is maintaining loyalty
    commitment to the cl doing no wrong to the cl
  • Veracity refers to ones duty always to tell the
    truth
  • Its important to respect protect the cls
    autonomy the cls right to be the ultimate
    decision maker about decisions that affect his or
    her life
  • You must avoid trying to impose personal values
    on the cl
  • Resources
  • Legal advice, nurse practice acts, hospital
    organizational polices, pts Bill of Rights,
    Colleagues, Clergy, examination of ones own
    ideals morals, code of ethics for nurses with
    interpretive statements of American nurses
    association
  • Ethical standards, although lacking the clarity
    power of law, do serve as a field guide for
    decision making.
  • You are bound to comply with the laws, even
    though you may feel morally obligated to follow
    ethical guidelines, these guidelines should not
    override laws.
  • Laws override ethical principles, which do not
    have the same legal strength

12
  • Mental Illness the Social Norm
  • Social norms are known to every society, most
    members of society conform to these norms
  • What constitutes desirable or acceptable
    behavior of the individual is decided by the
    group (society) that establishes the norms
  • Freedom of expression is a fundamental value of
    our society, a right embodied in the U.S.
    Constitution.
  • Responsibilities of the Therapeutic Relationship
  • Nurses clinicians also have a legal ethical
    obligation to the cl to society not to abuse
    the power that can exist when a cl relies on them
  • Protection of the cl when he or she is in a
    vulnerable state of mind must be considered.
  • This misuse of the therapeutic relationship
    constitutes grounds for losing a license
    violates the ethical duty of fidelity to the cl
  • Protection of the confidentiality privacy of
    the cls disclosures during therapeutic
    communication is also vitally important
  • Without self-awareness, nurses risk imposing
    their own value system upon the cl
  • Mental Health Laws
  • Laws have been enacted in each state to regulate
    the care t/ of the mentally ill.
  • Outpatient t/ is less expensive than
    hospitalization provides a less restrictive t/
    setting
  • With this shift in emphasis has come the more
    widespread use of psychotropic drugs in the t/ of
    mental illnesswhich has enabled many people to
    integrate more readily into the larger
    community-- an increasing awareness of the need
    to provide the mentally ill with humane care that
    respects their civil rights.
  • Civil Rights
  • Persons with mental illness are guaranteed the
    same rights under federal state laws any other
    citizen
  • Psychiatric cls rights include the right to
    humane care t/
  • Mentally ill in prisons jails are afforded the
    same protections.

13
  • Specific Client Rights
  • Client Consent
  • Proper orders for specific therapies t/ are
    required must be documented in the cls chart.
  • Consent for surgery, electroconvulsive t/, or the
    use of experimental drugs or procedures must be
    obtained.
  • Cl have the right to refuse participation.
  • Without fear of punishment or reprisal.
  • Communication
  • Cls have the right to communicate fully
    privately with those outside the facility,
    receive visitors, access to phones and mail
  • Rules regulations of the hospital need to be
    explained to the cl
  • Freedom from Harm
  • Right to be free from harm, which includes
    freedom from unnecessary or excessive physical
    restraint, isolation, medication, as well as
    freedom from abuse or neglect
  • Dignity Respect
  • Right to be treated with dignity respect
  • Right to be free from discrimination on the
    basis of ethnic origin, gender, age, disability,
    or religion
  • Confidentiality
  • Of care t/ is also an important right for all
    cls, particularly psychiatric cls
  • Photographs may not be taken without written
    consent
  • The cls privacy is protected
  • The cls permission must be obtained to share
    information with persons who are not directly
    involved in his or her care

14
  • Admission, Commitment, Discharge Procedures
  • Due process in Civil Commitment
  • Writ of habeas corpus, meaning a writ to free
    the person
  • the writ of habeas corpus the least
    restrictive alternative doctrine are two of the
    most important concepts applicable to civic
    commitment cases
  • Admission to the Hospital
  • Involuntarily committed cl is considered to be
    capable of consenting to t/, unless a judicial
    determination has been made or the cl lacks the
    capacity to understand the implications of his or
    her decision
  • Cl retain freedom from unreasonable bodily
    restraints the right to refuse medications,
    including psychotropic or antipsychotic
    medications
  • A medical standard or justification for
    admission should exist
  • A well-defined psychiatric problem must be
    established.
  • Voluntary Admission
  • Is sought by the cl or the cls guardian through
    a written application to the facility
  • Right to demand obtain release
  • Involuntary Admission (Commitment)
  • Is made without the cls consent
  • Is necessary when a person is in need of
    psychiatric t/, presents a danger to self or
    others, or is unable to meet his or her own basic
    needs
  • Judicial determination, administration, agency
    determination
  • It may be emergency, observational or temporary,
    or indeterminate or extended
  • Emergency Involuntary Hospitalization
  • Commitment for a specified period (1 to 10 days
    on average) to prevent dangerous behavior that is
    likely to cause harm to self or others

15
  • Release from the Hospital
  • Release from hospitalization depends on the cls
    admission status
  • Informal or voluntary admission, right to
    request receive release
  • Conditional release of voluntary cls, which
    enables the treating physician or administrator
    to order continued t/ on an outpatient basis if
    the clinical needs of the cl warrant further care
  • Conditional Release
  • Usually requires outpatient t/ for a specified
    period to determine the cls compliance with
    medication protocols, ability to meet basic
    needs, ability to reintegrate into the
    community
  • Discharge
  • Discharge, or unconditional release, is the
    termination of a cl-institution relationship.
  • Cls Right Under the Law
  • Right to T/
  • Statue requires that medical psychiatric care
    t/ be provided to all persons admitted to a
    public hospital
  • Right to T/
  • Environment must be humane
  • Staff must be qualified sufficient to provide
    adequate t/. Plan of care must be
    individualized.
  • state cannot constitutionally confine a
    nondangerous individual who is capable of
    surviving safely in freedom by himself or with
    the help of willing responsible family members
    or friends
  • Right to Refuse Treatment
  • Withdraw consent at any time
  • Retraction of consent previously given must be
    honored, whether it is a verbal or written
    retraction
  • Right to refuse t/ with psychotropic drugs has
    been debated in the courts, based partly on the
    issue of metal cls competency to give or withhold
    consent to t/ their status under the civil
    commitment statues
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