CARE
8TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)MICHELLE
MORRISON-VALFRE
TEST BANK
1) Reference
Ch. 1 — The History of Mental Health Care — Early Years
Question Stem
A nursing student is reviewing why people with mental illness
were often isolated in early societies. The student asks why
families and communities frequently responded with fear
instead of treatment. Which explanation best reflects the
historical context?
,Options
A. Mental illness was widely understood as a biologic brain
disorder.
B. Symptoms were often interpreted as spiritual, moral, or
supernatural problems.
C. Effective psychiatric medications were available but
underused.
D. Community-based psychiatric nursing had already replaced
confinement.
Correct Answer
B
Rationale
Correct: Early views often linked mental illness to supernatural
forces, moral failure, or spiritual causes, which promoted fear,
stigma, and exclusion. This historical context helps explain why
care was often punitive rather than therapeutic.
A: Biologic explanations came much later and were not the
dominant early belief.
C: Psychotropic medications were not available in early
societies.
D: Community-based psychiatric nursing developed much later.
Teaching Point
Historical misunderstanding of mental illness increased stigma
and isolation.
,Citation
Morrison-Valfre, M. (2023). Foundations of Mental Health Care
(8th ed.). Ch. 1.
2) Reference
Ch. 1 — The History of Mental Health Care — Early Years
Question Stem
A student nurse reads that some early caregivers used
“restraint” and “isolation” as treatment. Which interpretation
best shows understanding of this era?
Options
A. These interventions reflected a patient-centered recovery
model.
B. These interventions were used because they were
considered the least restrictive options.
C. They reflected a limited understanding of mental illness and a
focus on control rather than healing.
D. They were developed after evidence-based psychiatric
research became standard.
Correct Answer
C
Rationale
Correct: Early care often prioritized containment and social
control, not therapeutic recovery. This demonstrates how
limited knowledge and fear shaped treatment.
, A: Recovery-oriented care is a modern concept.
B: These were often highly restrictive, not least restrictive.
D: Evidence-based psychiatric nursing developed much later.
Teaching Point
Early “treatment” often meant control, not recovery.
Citation
Morrison-Valfre, M. (2023). Foundations of Mental Health Care
(8th ed.). Ch. 1.
3) Reference
Ch. 1 — The History of Mental Health Care — Early Years
Question Stem
A community health nurse explains to a parent that older
historical beliefs about mental illness shaped how people were
treated for centuries. Which outcome most likely resulted from
those beliefs?
Options
A. Widespread advocacy for voluntary treatment
B. Increased compassion and early diagnosis
C. Social exclusion, fear, and use of harsh custodial care
D. Immediate access to therapeutic counseling
Correct Answer
C