Title: Roles of the nurse in different treatment modalities
1Roles of the nurse in different treatment
modalities
2Individual Psychotherapy
- Foundation trusting relationship
- Goal changes in behaviors, self-perceptions,
emotional comfort, insight - Conceptual framework multiple including CBT
- Basic trust empathy helping the clients to
help themselves empowerment with self-esteem
self worth - Transference
- Managed care -how why
- Practical problem insurers will not cover the
costs
3Types of individual therapies
- Classic psychoanalysis unconsciousness, R
- Cognitive therapy how irrational thinking
- Behavioral therapy - reshaping
- Cognitive - behavioral therapy thought action
- Rational emotive therapy situation, irrational
belief - behavior - Choice therapy doing feeling
self-responsibility self-discipline - Brief, solution-focused therapy
4Outcome of psychoanalysis
- Insight into repressed conflicts
- Restructuring of the personality based on
integration of repressed conflicts.
5Cognitive Therapy
- Theorist Aaron Beck (1979)
- Cognitive Triad the interaction of the clients
negative view of self, the world, the future - How to perceive an event the event itself
- Cognition the clients construction of his
world - Roles of the nurse trust relationships, goals,
review feelings, note accomplishments - Using voicing doubt in dealing with clients
cognitive distortion
6Techniques of cognitive therapy
- Look for idiosyncratic meaning
- Question the evidence
- Reattribute
- De-catastrophize, Fantasize consequences
- Examine options and alternatives
- Weight advantages disadvantages
- Turn adversity to advantage
- Using thought stopping
- Use distraction
7Outcome of cognitive therapy
- Recognition of irrational thinking patterns
- Enhancement of functional responses
8Behavioral Therapy
- The concepts of behavior therapy stimulus,
response, reinforcement - Behaviors are measurable, observable,
- Classical conditioning S - R
- Operant conditioning
- Discriminative stimulus, response, reinforcing
stimulus - Learning, extinction
- Identify techniques for increasing/ decreasing a
behavior
9Behavior modification
- Conditioning
- Shaping
- Extinction
- Negative consequence
- Time out
- Reinforcement
- Modeling
- Token economy
10Nursing process behavior therapy
- Assessment appropriate/inappropriate behaviors,
time, frequency, duration - Dx expected changes
- Plan target response, decreasing or increasing,
new skills - Intervention reinforcement () (-)
- Evaluation outcomes (as planned) maintaining,
additional change (if needed),
11Focus outcome of behavioral therapy
- Promotion of desirable behaviors with
alternations of undesirable behaviors - Reshaping of behavior with elimination of
negative behaviors
12Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
- Focus on making changes in current ways of
thinking and behavior - Nursing intervention self-responsibility
self-discipline - Nurse acting as a coach, teacher in identifying
of situations involving undesirable thoughts and
actions - Example
- Pt My wife makes me so angry
- N What is self-defeating about the statement
you just made
13Outcome of cognitive-behavioral TH
- Participatory relationship between client and the
therapist - Results oriented
- Client learning new skills
14Rational-emotive therapy (RET)
- Theorist Albert Ellis (1973)
- Present perceptions, thoughts, assumptions,
beliefs, values, attitudes, and philosophies as
needing modification or change. - Should, ought, must .
- ABC theory Intervention is aimed at B
- A activating event
- B belief about A
- C emotional reaction
- Irrational belief - negative emotions
15Roles of the nurse in RET
- Acceptance do not allow the pt to condemn
themselves - Challenge/confront the irrational thinking
- Present centered
- Help the pt learn to take responsibility for
their ideas and behaviors. - Homework assignments focus on positive statements
and behaviors and skill development - Role-playing modeling
16Outcome of RET
- Client control of behavior and thinking
- Assumption of responsibility and blame for
irrational beliefs
17Outcome of RET
- Client control of behavior and thinking
- Assumption of responsibility and blame for
irrational beliefs
18Group Therapy
- Definition evolution
- Leadership
- Types autocratic, democratic, Laissez-faire
- power
- Group roles
- Group task roles initiator, information seeker,
information giver, coordinator, recorder - Group building maintenance roles encourager,
harmonizer, gatekeeper - Individual roles aggressor, blocker, recognition
seeker, play person,
19Group dynamics
- Group content
- Group process
- Pre-interaction phase selecting members,
contract - Orientation phase searching for similarity,
building norms, politeness, - Working phase attempt to solve the problems,
conflict, cooperation - Termination phase evaluates the experience and
explores members feelings about it and the
impending separation
20Therapeutic factors of group therapy
- Instillation of hope
- Universality
- Imparting of information
- Altruism
- Corrective recapitulation of the primary family
group - Development of socializing techniques
- Imitative behavior
- Interpersonal learning
- Group cohesiveness
- Catharsis expression of deep emotions
- Existential factors
21Leadership style
- Democratic
- Autocratic
- Laissez-fairs
22Roles of the group member
- Group maintenance role
- Individual roles
- Blocker
- Dominator
- Follower
- Gatekeeper
23Family Therapy
- Background and evolution
- Family burden
- Iatrogenic burden from the MH
system/professionals - Objective burden practical problems
- Subjective burden grief, fear, guilt, anger
24Roles of the healthy family
- Responding to family members needs
- Coping actively with lifes problems and stressed
- Accomplishing family tasks with equal
distribution of power - Encouraging interaction among family members and
the community - Promoting positive personal health practices
25Conceptual framework of family therapy
- Structural family therapy Minuchin
- Boundary, role, sub-system conflicts are
resolved in a rational manner - Communication theory Satir
- Identified patient
- Communication style
- Distractor, placator, blamer,
- Pseudomutuality, pseudohostility
- System theory Bowen
- Calgary Family Assessment Model -
26Concepts in Bowens theory
- Differentiation
- Triangulation
- Nuclear family emotion system
- Family projection process
- Emotional cutoff
- Mutigenerational transmission process
- Sibling position
27Family Assessment Calgary Family Assessment
Model
- Family structure genogram, ecomap
- Family development/life cycle associated tasks
- Beginning families
- Early childbearing families
- Families with preschool children
- Families with school children
- Families with teenagers
- Launching center families
- Families of middle years
- Families in retirement and old age
- Family function
- Cultural consideration
28Nursing Diagnoses (FT)
- Altered family processes
- Ineffective family coping
- Impaired home maintenance management
- Related issues
- Concept of resilience
- Major concerns of the care giver?
- Resources NAMI
- Confidentiality can be a barrier to including
families in care
29Family consultation vs. family therapy
- Family consultation
- services to the families
- secondary prevention scan feeling, focus,
finding - Clients symptoms spread distress through the
family by a ripple effect - Family therapy
- Clients symptom signal distress in the family
- Involves the participation of the entire family
- the family member with symptoms was not sick,
he/she was the symptom bearer for a disturbed
family system
30Conclusion on Family Therapy
- Family as a system
- Changes involve whole system
- Application of change theory (Prochaska, 1992)
- Precontemplation, contemplation, preparation,
action, maintenance - Family myths
- Family harmony
- Parental determinism
- Breakdown of the family
- Materialism
31Forensic Nursing
- Background overlap between the criminal justice
mental health systems criminalization
deinstitutionalization - Clients victims, perpetrators, and their
families - Related issues legal, ethical, political,
administrative, professional
32Characteristics of the forensic setting
- Physical setting
- Client population
- Authoritarian interpersonal environment
33Characteristics of the forensic population
- Poor judgment, limited reasoning abilities,
history of not learning form past mistakes, - High level of substance abuse
- Depression, suicidal ideation, aggressiveness,
irritability, violence - Personality disorder chr mental illnesses,
mental retardation, brain injuries, - Decreased social skills or physical strength
- Criminalized lifestyle
34Crisis Intervention
- Characters of crisis
- a threat to homeostasis - anxiety, confusion,
loss of problem solving ability - Crisis danger opportunity
- Short 4-6 weeks
35Phases of a crisis
- Increased anxiety - coping
- Coping failed - further increased anxiety
- Escalated anxiety - reach out for help
- Active state of crisis
36Balancing factors
- Realistic perception of the events
- Coping skills
- Support systems
37Nursing diagnoses
- Ineffective coping
- Anxiety
- Disturbed thought processes
- Situational low self-esteem
- Social isolation
- Impaired social interaction
38Types of crises
- Maturational or developmental crisis various
task in different states - Situational crisis - sudden traumatic event ie
job loss - Adventitious crisis precipitated by an
unexpected event ie, natural disasters
39Somatic Therapy
40Electroconvulsive Therapy
- Historic background 1938
- Mechanism unknown
- Modern ECT
- Nursing care before ECT like before surgery
- Explanation fear, stigma, fear, anxiety
- Physical exam - vital signs, lab data, spinal
X-ray - Consent form preparation
- NPO for 8 hours, moveable accessory,
- Atropine
- Empty bladder
41Nursing care
- During ECT typical grand mal seizure with tonic
and clonic phases - After ECT
- Respiratory problems apnea, oxygen
- Confusion disorientation
- Memory impairment
- Recording
42Issues related to ECT
- Advantages - , safety, effect,
- Disadvantages memory impairment
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