Title: Introduction to Psychiatric Nursing Module 2: Concepts
1Introduction to Psychiatric NursingModule 2
Concepts
2History Concepts
- How were mentally ill treated prior to1790s?
- Banishment
- Confinement
- What were attitudes toward them?
- Possessed by the devil
- Lacked basic human qualities
3St. Mary of Bethlehem Hospital, London
(Bedlam) Opened to lunatics 1403
Visitors pay for entertainment
4(No Transcript)
5History Concepts
- Period of Enlightenment begins in 1790s
- Concept of Asylum (sanctuary)
- If we treat patients humanely and
- respectfully, they will improve.
- Mental illness worsens with stress
- First mental hospitals (asylums) in US in
1820s
6History Concepts
- Who was Dorthea Dix?
- A nurse who was one of the first major reformers
in the United States. - Helped develop the concept of an asylum
- Direct role in opening 32 state hospitals
7Dorthea Dix Asylum in North Carolina
8 Austin, Texas State Insane Asylum 1851
9Era of Psychotropic Drugs
- Medications first available in 1950s, i.e.
chlorpromazine (Thorazine) for Schizophrenia,
Lithium for Mania - Hope for previously incurable mental illnesses
and enhanced quality of life.
10Community Mental Health Movement
- Response to the overcrowding and bureaucracy of
public mental hospitals. - Chronically mentally ill warehoused and often
abused, neglected - 1963 Community Mental Health Act
- Concept Patients can be treated better, cheaper
in community - Massive deinstitutionalization All State
Hospitals in some states closed - Results Increased acuity and strain on
- emergency services, increased number
- of homeless mentally ill
11ETHICAL ASPECTS SOCIAL VALUES(Consider what
effect each of these values has on mental health
care)
- Individual Freedom
- Money
- Paternalism vs Libertarianism
- Paternalism believes that an authority knows what
is best for you - Libertarianism believes that the individual knows
what is best for them - No other area of nursing is so affected by social
values as psychiatric nursing
12A Nurse Needs to Know About
- How to adapt legal principles to mental health
settings - safeguarding nursing practice from charges of
negligence, false imprisonment, assault, or
battery - DUTY TO WARN
- Mental health professionals must warn others of a
clients threat of suicide or of harm to self or
others
13Rights of Psychiatric/Mental Health Patients
- Right to refuse treatment
- Right to informed consent ( and the right to know
about rights) - Right to confidentiality
- Right to receive visitors and telephone calls
- Right to be treated with respect
- Right to be treated in the least restrictive
environment
14Client Rights
- Concept of Least Restrictive Environment
- Should guide nursing decisions
- Seclusion is used when the person is a danger to
others - Restraint is used when the person is a danger to
self - Never used to get a patient to comply
15Rights of Mentally Ill Patients
- Basic Needs
- Warmth clothing a blanket
- Food
- Access to the outdoors
- Contact with family, legal representative
- Do NOT have right to all possessions
- (When can access to possessions be restricted?)
16Legal Aspects Commitments(As Applied under
Texas Law)
- Mental illness as defined by the Texas Mental
Health Code - Mental illness is a disease or condition which
either - Substantially impairs the persons thought,
perception of reality, emotional process - and/or
- Grossly impairs behavior as manifested by a
recent event of disturbed behavior (Gravely
disabled)
17Commitments
- Voluntary Commitment
- A person 16 years of age or over signs themselves
in for admission. Person is advised of their
rights under the code. - 4 Hour Rule If a patient changes their mind
about being in the hospital, psychiatrist has 4
hours to file for a commitment. - Signs a consent for treatment.
18Commitments, contd
- Most commitments are voluntary where the
individual or the therapist request admission and
the patient meets criteria for admission - The patient must sign consents for all
psychotropic medications. Refusal to sign these
consents means the medications can NOT be
administered
19Involuntary Commitments
- Emergency Mental Illness Commitment Allows Mental
Health Deputies (Crisis Intervention Team) to
pick up a person who presents an IMMINENT DANGER
TO SELF OR OTHERS and is Gravely Disabled - and bring them into custody for 24 HOURS.
- MD can begin commitment procedures (file)
- at that time.
20Involuntary Commitments, contd
- Order of Protective Custody (OPC)
- Commitment must be accompanied by a medical
certificate, which states that the physician has
examined the patient within 24 hours. Filed at
the County Clerks Office. - Probable Cause Hearing within 72 hrs.
- Pt. can be committed for 14 days.
21Involuntary Commitments, contd
- Temporary Commitment
- Papers must be filed with the Court
- Hearing before a judge with physician and patient
present. - Must prove Danger to self or others or meets
the deterioration standard - Can be committed UP TO 90 DAYS.
- May be discharged any time staff believes pt. is
ready. - May change to Outpatient Commitment
22Involuntary Commitments, contd
- Extended Mental Health Commitment
- Very strong evidence needed
- Commitment is up to 1 year.
23Last but not least . . . .
- All involuntary commitments can include
court-ordered medications - All commitments discussed previously can apply to
Chemical Dependency
24TREATMENT SETTINGS AND THE CONTINUUM OF CARE
- Where do we see the mentally ill being treated?
- How do individuals enter the mental health
system? - Why is discharge planning so important?
25PSYCHOTHERAPEUTIC MANAGEMENT
- TOOLS ARE
- SELF ? DRUGS ? ENVIRONMENT
- ? Therapeutic Use of SELF (Nurse-Client
Relationship) - ? DRUGS Psychopharmacology
- ? ENVIRONMENT Therapeutic Milieu
26NURSE ON THE MENTAL HEALTH TEAM
- Mental Health Team
- Psychiatrist
- Nursing staff includes licensed nurse, tech
- Psychiatric Social Worker
- Psychologist
- Therapeutic Recreation and Expressive Arts
personnel - Client and Family
- Other Substance abuse counselor, employment
specialist, dietician, etc.