Medical 10-Schizophrenia-Application of Nursing Process-Vide14
Terms
undefined, object
copy deck
- Schizophrenia affects the folowing five things differently in each person depending on if it's an acute (psychotic phase) or if it's chronic (long-term phase) so nursing interventions are affected as well.
-
thought processes and content
perception
emotion
behavior
social functioning - The nurse should NOT make ______ about the client's abilities based solely on the medical diagnosis of schizophrenia.
- assumptions
- A nurse may handle a patient with positive signs and another patient with negative signs differently even though they have the same diagnosis as schizophrenia.
- okay
-
Is a patient experiencing the following displaying positive or negative signs?
appears frightened
hears voices
makes no eye contact
mumbles constantly - positive (psychotic)
-
Is a patient experiencing the following displaying positive or negative signs?
lacks energy for daily tasks
feelings of lonliness and
isolation - negative
- The nurse may ask baseline questions concerning?
-
history of schizophrenia...
age of onset (younger have poorer outcomes)...
previous hospital admissions
and response to hospitali-
zation....
previous suicide attempts (10% of all diagnosed succeed)... - Ask if there is a history of schizophrenia in the following way for baseline study.
-
history with schizophrenia
"How do you usually spend your time?"
"Can you describe what you do each day?" - Concerning suicide attempts, the nurse might ask in the following way?
-
"Have you ever attempted suicide?"
"Have you ever heard voices telling you to hurt yourself?" - The nurse might ask about aggression or violence in the following way?
- "What do you do when you are angry, frustrated, upset, or scared"?
- The nurse may assess if the client has been using current support systems by asking the following questions?
-
Has the client kept in contact with family or friends?
Has the client been to scheduled groups or therapy appointments?
Does the client seem to run out of money between paychecks?
Have the client's living arrangements changed recently? - The nurse can assess the client's perception of his current situation by asking?
-
"What do you see as the primary problem now?"
"What do you need help managing now?" - Appearance of clients may vary widely from normal to inappropriate. Client may exhibit agitation and pacing or appear unmoving (catatonia).
- okay
-
Term for unmoving.
Example: Client may appear catatonic. - catatonia
- A client may demonstrate seemingly purposeless gestures (stereotypic behavior) and odd facial expressions such as grimacing.
- okay
- The client may imitate movements and gestures of someone whom he or she is observing. This is termed?
- echopraxia
- The client may ramble and make no sense to the listener.
- okay
- The client may exhibit psychomotor retardation which means?
- a general slowing of all movements
- Sometimes the client may be almost immobile, curled into a ball resembling?
- fetal position
- Clients with the catatonic type of schizophrenia can exhibit waxy flexibility which means?
- they maintain any position in which they are placed, even if the position is awkward or uncomfortable
- The client may exhibit an unusual speech pattern that is jumbled words and phrases that are disconnected or incoherent and makes no sense to the listener.
- word salad
- The client may exhibit echolalia which is?
- repetition or imitation of what someone else says.
- Speech of a client may be slowed or accelerated in rate and volume; the client may speak in whispers or hushed tones or may talk loudly or yell.
- okay
- What is the term used to refer to hesitation before the client responds to questions. May last 30 or 45 seconds and usually indicates the client's difficulty with cognition or thought processes.
- latency of response
-
Ideas that are related to one another based on sound or rhyming rather than meaning is termed?
Example: "I will take a pill if I go up the hill but not if my name is Jill, I don't want to kill." - clang association
-
A combination of jumbled words and phrases that are disconnected or incoherent and make no sense to the listener.
Example: "Corn, potatoes, jump up, play games, grass, cupboard." - word salad
-
The stereotyped repetition of words or phrases that may or may not have meaning to the listener.
Example: "I want to go home, go home, go home, go home." - verbigeration
-
The persistent adherence to a single idea or topic and verbal repetition of a sentence, phrase, or word, even when another person attempts to change the topic.
Example: Nurse: "How have you been sleeping lately?"
Client: " - perseveration
-
Words invented by the client.
Example: "I'm afraid of grittiz. If there are any grittiz here, I will have to leave. Are you a grittiz?" - neologisms
-
The client's imitation or repetition of what the nurse says.
Example: Nurse: "Can you tell me how you're feeling?"
Client: "Can you tell me how you're feeling, how you're feeling?" - echolalia
-
Use of words or phrases that are flowery, excessive, and pompous.
Example: "Would you be so kind, as a representative of Florence Nightingale, as to do me the honor of providing just a wee bit of refreshment, perhaps in the form of some clear s - stilted language
- What term is used for no facial expression?
- flat effect
- What term is used for having few observable facial expressions?
- blunted affect
- Clients with schizophrenia report and demonstrate wide variances in _____ and _____.
-
mood
affect - The typical facial expression often is described as ____-____.
- mask-like
- The affect also may be described as ____, characterized by giddy laughter for no apparent reason.
- silly
- The client may exhibit an inappropriate _____ or _____ incongruent with the context of the situation. This incongruence ranges from mild or subtle to grossly inappropriate. For example, the client may laugh and grin while describing the death of a family
-
expression
emotions - The client may report feeling depressed and having no pleasure or joy in life which is termed?
- anhedonia
- A client may report feeling all-knowing, all-powerful, and not at all concerned with the circumstance of the situation.
- okay
- It is common for the client to report exaggerated feelings of well-being during episodes of _____ or delusional thinking and a lack of energy or pleasurable feelings during the _____ or long-term phase of the illness.
-
psychotic (acute)
chronic - The primary feature of schizophrenia is referred to as ______ disorder.
-
thought
(thought and information processing is disrupted) - Term used when a client suddenly stops talking in the middle of a sentence and remains silent for several seconds to 1 minute.
- thought blocking
- Term used when a client states they believe others can hear their thoughts.
- thought broadcasting
- Term used when a client states others are taking their thoughts.
- thought withdrawal
- Term used when a client says others are placing thoughts in their mind against their will.
- thought insertion
-
Term used when clients veer onto unrelated topics and never answer the original question.
Example: Nurse: "How have you been sleeping lately?"
Client: "Oh, I try to sleep at night. I like to listen to music to help me sleep - tangential thinking
-
________ may be evidenced if the client gives unnecessary details or strays from the topic but eventually provides the requested information.
Example: Nurse: "How have you been sleeping lately?"
Client: "Oh, I go to bed ea - Circumstantiality
-
Term used to describe poverty of content or lack of any real meaning or substance in what is said by client.
Example: Nurse: "How have you been sleeping lately?"
Client: "Well, I guess, I don't know, hard to tell." - alogia
- What is the term used for fixed, false beliefs with no basis in reality...occurs in psychotic phase of illness?
- delusions
-
A common characteristic of schizophrenic delusions is the _____, _____, and total _____ with which the client holds these beliefs, and will act accordingly.
Example: A delusional client with persecution will probably be suspicious, mistrustful -
direct
immediate
certainty - External, contradictory information or facts cannot alter ______ beliefs. If asked why the client believes such an unlikely idea, the client often replies, "I just know it."
- delusional
- Initially the nurse assesses the _____ and ____ of the delusion to know what behaviors to expect and to try to establish reality for the client.
-
content
depth -
When illiciting information about the client's delusional beliefs, the nurse must be careful not to ______ or _______ them.
The nurse might ask the client to explain what he or she believes by saying "Can you explain that to me?" or " -
(know)
support
challenge - Name 5 types of delusions?
-
grandiose
persecutory/paranoid
referential or ideas of
reference
religious
somatic - A type of delusion often centered around the second coming of Christ or another significant religious figure or prophet. These religious delusions appear suddenly as part of the client's psychosis and are not part of his or her religious faith or that of
- religious delusions
-
A type of delusion involving the client's belief that "others" are planning to harm the client or are spying, following, ridiculing, or belittling the client in some way. Sometimes the client cannot define who these "others" are.
- persecutory/paranoid
-
Term used involving the client's belief that television broadcasts, music, or newspaper articles have special meaning for him or her.
Examples: The client may report that the president was speaking directly to him on a news broadcast or that - referential delusions or ideas of reference
-
Term characterized by the client's claim to association with famous people or celebrities, or the client's belief that he or she is famous or capable of great feats.
Examples: The client may claim to be engaged to a famous movie star or relat - grandiose delusions
-
A type of delusion which is generally vague and unrealistic beliefs about the client's health or bodily functions. Factual information or diagnostic testing does not change these beliefs.
Example: A male client may say that he is pregnant, or a cli - somatic delusions
- One hallmark symptom of schizophrenia psychosis is ________ which are false sensory perceptions, or perceptual experiences that do not exist in reality.
-
(know)
hallucinations - Hallucinations can involve the ____ senses and _____ sensations; can be threatening and frightening for the client, although clients less frequently report hallucinations as pleasant.
-
five
bodily - Initially, the client perceives hallucinations as ____, but later in the illness he or she may recognize them as hallucinations.
- real
-
Hallucinations are distinguished from ______, which are misperceptions of actual environmental stimuli.
Example: While walking through the woods, a person thinks he sees a snake at the side of the path, only to find it's a stick. Fact or real - illusions
- Name 7 types of hallucinations?
-
(know)
auditory...command...MOST COMMON
visual (SECOND MOST COMMON)
olfactory
tactile
gustatory
cenesthetic
kinesthetic - A type of hallucination involving a taste lingering in the mouth or the sense that food tastes like something else. The taste may be metallic or bitter or may be represented as a specific taste.
- gustatory hallucinations
- A type of hallucination involving seeing images that do not exist at all, such as lights or a dead person, or distortions such as seeing a frightening monster instead of the nurse. They are the second most common type of hallucination.
- visual hallucinations
- A type of hallucination that involves smells or odors. They may be a specific scent, such as urine or feces, or more general such as a rotten or rancid odor. In addition to clients with schizophrenia, this type of hallucination often occurs with dementia
- olfactory hallucinations
- A type of hallucination which is the most COMMON type, involves hearing sounds, most often voices, talking to or about the client. There may be one or multiple voices; a familiar or unfamiliar persons's voice may be speaking.
- auditory hallucinations
- A type of auditory hallucination in which voices demand that the client take action, often to harm self or others, and are considered dangerous.
- command hallucinations
- A type of hallucination referring to sensations such as electricity running through the body or bugs crawling on the skin. Tactile hallucinations are found most often in clients undergoing alcohol withdrawal; they rarely occur in clients with schizophren
- tactile hallucinations
-
A type of hallucination involving theh client's report that he or she feels bodily functions that are usually undetectable.
Examples would be the sensation of urine forming or impulses being transmitted through the brain. - cenesthetic hallucinations
- A type of hallucination occurring when the client is motionless but reports the sensation of bodily movement. Occasionally the bodily movement is something unusual such as floating above the ground.
- kinesthetic hallucinations
- During episodes of psychosis, clients are commonly disoriented to _____ and sometimes ______.
-
time
place - Term used for the most extreme form of disorientation in which the client feels detached from his behavior. Although the client can state their name correctly, they feel as if their body belongs to someone else or that their spirit is detached from the b
- depersonalization
- Assessing the ______ processes of a client with schizophrenia is difficult while experiencing a psychosis. The client usually demonstrates poor ______ functioning as a result of disordered thoughts. The nurse should not assume the client has limited ____
-
(know)
intellectual
intellectual
intellectual
intellectual -
Clients often have difficulty with _____ thinking and may respond in a very literal way to other people and environment.
Nurse: "Interpret a stitch in time saves nine."
Client: "I need to sew up my clothes."
-
abstract
(be very concrete when speaking to the client) - ______ is based on the ability to interpret the environment correctly, and so it follows that the client with disordered thought processes and environmental misinterpretations will have great difficulty with it, posing a safety hazard or neglect of Maslo
- Judgment
-
_____ can be severely impaired, esp. early in illness, when family doesn't know what is happening.
Over time, some clients can learn about the illness, anticipate problems, and seek appropriate assistance....otherwise failure to do so results in li - Insight
- One of the major problems with schizophrenia is the deterioration of ___-____.
- self-concept
- The client may suffer from "loss of ego boundaries" which describes the client's lack of a clear sense of where his or her own body, mind, and influence end and where those aspects of other animate and inanimate objects begin. This lack of ego
-
depersonalization
derealization
reference - Term used to mean environmental objects become smaller or larger, seem unfamiliar...one of the points discussed in the phrase "loss of ego boundaries".
- derealization
- ______-_____ may be distorted to the extent that the patient believes they are fused with another person or object, may not recognize body parts as their own, or may fail to know whether they are male or female. These difficulties are the source of many
- Self-concept
- Term used for excessive water intake?
- polydipsia
- Polydipsia can lead to _____ intoxication.
- water
- With polydipsia, serum 1 _____ levels can become dangerously low, leading to 2_____.
-
1 sodium
2 seizures - Polydipsia is usually seen in clients who have had _____ and _____ mental illness for many years as well as ____-___ therapy with antipsychotic meds.
-
severe
persistent
long-term - _______ may be caused by the behavioral state itself or be precipitated by the use of antidepressant or antipsychotic medications.
- Polydipsia