ATI MENTAL HEALTH A
2026/2027 Proctored Examination
90-Question Comprehensive Clinical Application Examination
Aligned with ATI Mental Health A Blueprint | Cognitive Distribution: 25% Recall, 55% Application, 20% Analysis
Instructions: This examination consists of 90 multiple-choice questions across 10 sections. Each question has ONE best
answer. Select the option that reflects the priority nursing action based on ATI priority frameworks (Safety, Least
Restrictive, ABCs, Maslow's Hierarchy). Rationales are provided after each question with ATI-specific clinical reasoning.
SECTION 1: Foundations of Mental Health Nursing — Therapeutic
Communication, Nurse-Client Relationship, Defense Mechanisms &
Ethical/Legal Principles (Q1-Q15)
Q1: A nurse is caring for a client newly admitted with major depressive disorder who states, "There's no point in
talking; nothing will ever get better." Which response by the nurse demonstrates the therapeutic communication
technique of reflecting?
A. "Don't worry, the medications will make you feel better soon."
B. "You feel that talking won't help because things seem hopeless right now." [CORRECT]
C. "Why do you think nothing will ever get better?"
D. "Let's talk about something more positive to lift your mood."
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Reflecting mirrors the client's feelings back to them, validating the emotional experience without judgment or
problem-solving. Option A is false reassurance (non-therapeutic), Option C uses a "why" question that puts
the client on the defensive, and Option D changes the subject, minimizing the client's feelings. ATI
emphasizes reflecting as a core technique to promote continued client self-exploration.
Q2: A client hospitalized for schizophrenia tells the nurse, "I'm not taking that poison; the doctor is trying to kill
me." Which response is the MOST therapeutic?
A. "The doctor prescribed this to help you, not to harm you."
B. "You seem very frightened about taking this medication." [CORRECT]
C. "Why would the doctor want to kill you?"
D. You should trust the staff here; we are here to help you."
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Acknowledging the client's underlying emotion (fear) without arguing with the delusion is the therapeutic
approach. Option A argues with the delusion and provides false reassurance; Option C asks a "why" question
that demands logical explanation from a psychotic client; Option D gives advice and minimizes feelings.
Validating the feeling (not the delusion) preserves the therapeutic relationship while not reinforcing the false
belief.
Page 1 | ATI Mental Health A — Proctored Examination 2026/2027
,ATI MENTAL HEALTH A 2026/2027 PROCTORED EXAM 90 Questions | Form A
Q3: A nursing student is preparing to terminate a 6-week therapeutic relationship with a client. Which statement by
the student indicates a need for further teaching about termination?
A. "We will review your progress and achievements during our last few sessions."
B. "I can give you my personal cell number in case you need to reach me after discharge." [CORRECT]
C. "We should discuss any feelings of loss or anxiety about ending our relationship."
D. "I'll introduce you to your outpatient counselor before our last meeting."
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Sharing personal contact information violates professional boundaries, blurs the nurse-client relationship, and
is expressly prohibited in ATI's therapeutic relationship guidelines. Termination should include reviewing
progress (A), discussing feelings about ending (C), and providing continuity through referral (D).
Professional boundaries protect both the client and the nurse.
Q4: A client with alcohol use disorder says, "I only drink because my wife nags me constantly — anyone would
drink in my situation." Which defense mechanism is the client demonstrating?
A. Denial
B. Projection
C. Rationalization [CORRECT]
D. Displacement
Correct Answer: C
Rationale:
Rationalization is creating a logical-sounding excuse to justify unacceptable behavior or feelings. The client
is justifying drinking by blaming the wife's behavior. Denial (A) would be refusing to acknowledge drinking
at all; projection (B) would be attributing his own feelings to the wife; displacement (D) would be redirecting
emotions onto a safer target. ATI requires accurate identification of defense mechanisms to plan appropriate
interventions.
Q5: A 19-year-old client with anorexia nervosa stomps her foot and yells, "I won't eat this! You can't make me!"
when presented with her meal tray. The client's behavior is MOST consistent with which defense mechanism?
A. Regression [CORRECT]
B. Sublimation
C. Repression
D. Compensation
Correct Answer: A
Rationale:
Regression is reverting to an earlier developmental level of behavior under stress. Stomping the foot and
yelling are childish behaviors in an adolescent/young adult, signaling a return to an earlier stage. Sublimation
(B) channels impulses into acceptable activities; repression (C) is unconscious forgetting; compensation (D)
is making up for a perceived deficit in one area by excelling in another.
Page 2 | ATI Mental Health A — Proctored Examination 2026/2027
,ATI MENTAL HEALTH A 2026/2027 PROCTORED EXAM 90 Questions | Form A
Q6: A client is involuntarily admitted under emergency commitment after a suicide attempt. Which statement by the
client's spouse indicates understanding of the client's legal rights?
A. "Because my spouse was committed involuntarily, the hospital can keep him as long as they want."
B. "My spouse has the right to legal counsel and a hearing within a specified time period." [CORRECT]
C. "Involuntary commitment means my spouse loses all rights to refuse treatment."
D. "Once committed, my spouse cannot leave even if a doctor says he is stable."
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Involuntarily committed clients retain due-process rights, including legal representation and a court hearing
within a state-mandated time frame (typically 72 hours to a few days). Involuntary commitment does NOT
strip all treatment rights (C), does not allow indefinite hold (A), and the client must be released once criteria
for commitment no longer apply (D). ATI stresses patient rights are preserved during commitment.
Q7: A client in group therapy discloses an intention to kill a named coworker. The nurse recalls the Tarasoff ruling.
Which action is the nurse's LEGAL obligation?
A. Maintain strict confidentiality because the statement was made in therapy.
B. Inform the identified potential victim and notify law enforcement. [CORRECT]
C. Document the statement but take no further action unless the client acts.
D. Confront the client in group about the inappropriateness of the disclosure.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
The Tarasoff ruling establishes the "duty to warn and protect" an identifiable, potential victim of serious
harm, overriding confidentiality. The nurse must warn the intended victim and notify law enforcement.
Confidentiality (A) is breached in this specific circumstance to protect life; documentation alone (C) is
insufficient; confronting in group (D) does not fulfill the legal duty.
Q8: During a mental status examination, the nurse observes the client's speech is rapid, loud, and difficult to
interrupt, jumping rapidly between loosely connected topics. Which MSE component is being assessed, and what is
the documented finding?
A. Thought content — delusions
B. Thought process — flight of ideas [CORRECT]
C. Mood — euphoric
D. Cognition — impaired attention
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Speech pattern — how thoughts are connected and delivered — is part of the thought process component of
the MSE. Rapid, loud speech with rapid topic shifts is flight of ideas, classic of mania. Thought content (A)
refers to what the client thinks (delusions, obsessions); mood (C) is the sustained emotion; cognition (D)
includes orientation, memory, and attention. ATI distinguishes thought process from thought content
carefully.
Page 3 | ATI Mental Health A — Proctored Examination 2026/2027
, ATI MENTAL HEALTH A 2026/2027 PROCTORED EXAM 90 Questions | Form A
Q9: A nurse is performing a mental status examination on an older adult. The client knows his name and current
location but believes the year is 1985. The nurse documents this finding as impairment in which MSE component?
A. Remote memory
B. Orientation [CORRECT]
C. Immediate memory
D. Insight
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Orientation assesses person, place, and time. The client is oriented to person and place but disoriented to
time, which is documented as impaired orientation. Remote memory (A) involves distant past events;
immediate memory (C) is brief recall of just-presented information; insight (D) is the client's awareness of
having a problem. Disorientation to time is often an early sign of cognitive impairment.
Q10: A client newly prescribed clozapine asks the nurse why weekly blood draws are required for the first 6 months.
The nurse's BEST response is based on the risk of which adverse effect?
A. Tardive dyskinesia
B. Agranulocytosis [CORRECT]
C. Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
D. Serotonin syndrome
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Clozapine carries a black-box warning for agranulocytosis (severe neutropenia), requiring weekly absolute
neutrophil count (ANC) monitoring for the first 6 months, then every 2 weeks thereafter. Tardive dyskinesia
(A) is a late-onset movement disorder; NMS (C) is an acute hyperthermic crisis; serotonin syndrome (D) is
associated with serotonergic agents, not clozapine. ATI identifies clozapine monitoring as a critical safety
requirement.
Q11: A client on haloperidol for 3 weeks develops muscle rigidity, temperature of 39.4°C (103°F), diaphoresis, and
altered mental status. The nurse should recognize these findings as indicative of which condition, and what is the
PRIORITY action?
A. Tardive dyskinesia — administer diphenhydramine
B. Neuroleptic malignant syndrome — stop the medication and notify the provider [CORRECT]
C. Acute dystonia — administer benztropine
D. Akathisia — administer propranolol
Correct Answer: B
Rationale:
Muscle rigidity, high fever, autonomic instability, and altered mental status are hallmark signs of Neuroleptic
Malignant Syndrome (NMS), a life-threatening antipsychotic adverse effect. The priority action is to
discontinue the antipsychotic, notify the provider immediately, and provide supportive care. Tardive
dyskinesia (A) is a late involuntary movement disorder; acute dystonia (C) and akathisia (D) are
extrapyramidal symptoms without fever.
Page 4 | ATI Mental Health A — Proctored Examination 2026/2027