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Mental Health Nursing II NURS 2310

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Mental Health Nursing II ... /adolescent psychiatric illnesses Disorders Affecting Children/Adolescents _____ Mental Retardation Autistic Disorder Attention-Deficit ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mental Health Nursing II NURS 2310


1
Mental Health Nursing IINURS 2310
  • Unit XIII
  • Psychiatric Conditions Affecting Children and
    Adolescents

2
Objective 1
  • Identifying etiology and characteristics of
    specified childhood/adolescent psychiatric
    illnesses

3
  • Disorders Affecting Children/Adolescents
  • ____________________________________
  • Mental Retardation
  • Autistic Disorder
  • Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
  • Conduct Disorder
  • Oppositional Defiant Disorder
  • Tourettes Disorder
  • Separation Anxiety Disorder

4
  • Mental Retardation
  • Involves deficits in general intellectual
    functioning and adaptive functioning
  • General intellectual functioning measured by an
    individuals performance on IQ tests
  • Adaptive functioning refers to the persons
    ability to adapt to the requirements of daily
    living and the expectations of age and cultural
    group
  • IQ is 70 or below
  • Deficits/impairment in communication, self-care,
    self-direction, leisure, and safety

5
  • Mental Retardation (contd)
  • Predisposing factors
  • Hereditary
  • Approximately 5 of cases
  • Downs syndrome, Tay-Sachs disease
  • Early alterations in embryonic development
  • Drug/alcohol toxicity
  • Maternal illnesses/infections
  • Pregnancy and prenatal problems
  • Birth injuries
  • General medical conditions acquired in infancy or
    childhood
  • Environmental influences and other mental
    disorders

6
  • Autistic Disorder
  • Characterized by a withdrawal into the self and
    into a fantasy world of ones own creation
  • Development in social interaction and
    communication is markedly abnormal or impaired
  • Activities and interests are restricted may be
    considered bizarre
  • Prevalence of approximately 1 in 150 children in
    the U.S.
  • Onset occurs before age 3

7
  • Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
  • Persistent pattern of inattention and/or
    hyperactivity-impulsitivity that is more frequent
    and severe than is typically observed in
    individuals at same developmental level
  • Hyperactivity excessive psychomotor activity
    that may be purposeful or aimless, accompanied by
    physical movements that are usually more rapid
    than normal
  • Impulsitivity acting without reflection and
    without thought to the consequences

8
  • ADHD (contd)
  • Onset of disorder difficult to diagnose in
    children younger than age 4
  • ADHD often not recognized until child enters
    school
  • Five to nine times more common in boys than in
    girls
  • Believed to have strong genetic component
  • Parent with ADHD may have child with ADHD
  • Sibling string
  • Possible link to high serum lead levels

9
  • Conduct Disorder
  • Repetitive and persistent pattern of behavior in
    which basic rights of others or major
    age-appropriate societal norms or rules are
    violated
  • Physical aggression common
  • Childhood-onset begins prior to age 10 more
    likely to have continued problems during
    adolescence, and antisocial as adult
  • Adolescent-onset absence of any criteria
    characteristic of conduct disorder before age 10

10
  • Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)
  • Characterized by a pattern of negativistic,
    defiant, disobedient, and hostile behavior toward
    authority figures that occurs more frequently
    than is usually observed in individuals of same
    age/developmental level
  • Typically begins by age 8, and usually not later
    than early adolescence
  • May precede a conduct disorder
  • Normal oppositional phases occur in older
    infancy, toddlerhood, and adolescence

11
  • Tourettes Disorder
  • Presence of multiple motor tics along with one or
    more vocal tics
  • Tics may appear simultaneously or at different
    periods during the illness
  • Causes marked distress or interferes with various
    areas of functioning
  • Onset occurs before the age of 18
  • Characterized by periods of remission
  • Symptoms usually diminish during adolescence and
    adulthood

12
  • Separation Anxiety Disorder
  • Involves excessive anxiety concerning separation
    from the home or from those to whom the person is
    attached
  • Considered in excess of what would be expected
    for developmental level
  • Interferes with social, academic, and
    occupational levels of functioning
  • More common in girls than in boys
  • Etiological factors may include stressful life
    events and/or family influences

13
Objective 2
  • Examining medical treatments and nursing
    interventions for clients experiencing a
    childhood/adolescent psychiatric disorder

14
  • Behavior Therapy
  • Classical conditioning, operant conditioning
  • Useful for disruptive behavior disorders
  • Family Therapy
  • Family Education
  • Behavior modification techniques
  • Consistency
  • Group Therapy
  • Opportunity to interact with peers
  • Learning of appropriate social behaviors
  • Psychopharmacology

15
Objective 3
  • Exploring concerns associated with providing
    psychiatric care to children and adolescents

16
  • Medication issues
  • Dosing problems
  • Addiction
  • Legal issues
  • Guardianship concerns
  • Safety
  • Developmental issues
  • Appropriateness of behaviors compared to norms of
    life stage
  • Parental/caregiver issues
  • Manipulation of health care system
  • Knowledge deficits

17
Objective 4
  • Applying the nursing process to the treatment of
    special populations

18
  • Assessment
  • Nursing Diagnosis
  • Planning
  • Implementation
  • Evaluation
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