Exam 2
Questions
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,Psychiatric interview - {✔✔ANSWER✔✔}-the process by which psychiatric assessment is conducted
-primary tasks
• building a therapeutic alliance between the PMHNP & client
• obtaining a database of psychiatric info about the client
• establishing a dx
• negotiating a tx plan
Therapeutic Alliance - {✔✔ANSWER✔✔}-a feeling that you should create over the course of the
diagnostic interview, a sense of rapport, trust, and warmth
-most important goal of the interview process
-the cooperative working relationship between the therapist and client
• begins during the initial or opening phase of the interview
-fundamental component of successful therapy
• Without trust, adherence to treatment recommendations may be compromised
• interview may not elicit the information needed to formulate an appropriate dx & plan of care
without rapport & trust
Creating rapport: tips - {✔✔ANSWER✔✔}--Be Yourself
-Be Warm, Courteous, and Emotionally Sensitive
-Actively Defuse the Strangeness of the Clinical Situation
-Give Your Patient the Opening Word
, -Gain Your Patient's Trust by Projecting Competence
How to approach threatening topics (sensitive/embarrassing material) - {✔✔ANSWER✔✔}--
Normalization
-Symptom Expectation
-Symptom Exaggeration
-Reduction of Guilt
-Use Familiar Language When Asking about Behaviors
Normalization - {✔✔ANSWER✔✔}-Introducing Q with some type of normalizing statement
-two principal ways to do this:
1. start the question by implying that the behavior is a normal or understandable response to a
mood or situation
• ex: Sometimes when people are very depressed, they think of hurting themselves. Has this been
true for you?
2. Begin by describing another patient (or patients) who has engaged in the behavior, showing your
patient that she is not alone
• ex: I've talked to several patients who've said that their depression causes them to have strange
experiences, like hearing voices or thinking that strangers are laughing at them. Has that been
happening to you?
Symptom Expectation - {✔✔ANSWER✔✔}-communicate that a behavior is in some way normal or
expected
-Phrase your Q's to imply that you already assume the patient has engaged in some behavior and
that you will not be offended by a positive response
-high index of suspicion of some self-destructive activity
-Ex: patient is profoundly depressed and has expressed feelings of hopelessness. You suspect
suicidality, but you sense that the patient may be too ashamed to admit it. Rather than gingerly
asking "Have you had any thoughts that you'd be better off dead?" you might decide to use
symptom expectation. "What kinds of ways to hurt yourself have you thought about?"
*reserve this technique for situations in which it seems appropriate