2026/2027 – COMPLETE QUESTION BANK WITH VERIFIED ANSWERS &
RATIONALES | INSTANT PDF DOWNLOAD
About this resource:
This document contains verified questions and answers for the ATI Capstone Mental
Health Assessment Proctored Exam based on 2026/2027 curriculum materials. All
answers are in bold italic with italic rationales aligned with current NCLEX and NGN
standards. Topics include foundations of psychiatric nursing, schizophrenia and psychotic
disorders, mood disorders, suicide precautions, anxiety disorders, PTSD,
psychopharmacology (lithium, clozapine, MAOIs, SSRIs, antipsychotics), personality
disorders (borderline, antisocial), substance use disorders and withdrawal, eating disorders
(anorexia, bulimia), childhood disorders (ADHD, ASD, conduct disorder), therapeutic
communication, defense mechanisms, and crisis intervention
SECTION 1: FOUNDATIONS OF PSYCHIATRIC NURSING (Questions 1-20)
Q1. A nurse in an outpatient mental health clinic is preparing to conduct an initial
client interview. Which of the following actions should the nurse identify as the
priority?
A. Explain the rules of the clinic
B. Identify the client's perception of her mental health status
C. Discuss the duration of the session
D. Review the client's medical history
Rationale: Before providing education or structure, the nurse must assess the client's
reason for seeking care and their perception of the problem. This establishes the foundation
for a client-centered plan and directs the interview toward the client's immediate concerns .
Q2. A client tells the nurse, "Don't tell anyone, but I hid a sharp knife under my
mattress to protect myself from my roommate." Which action should the nurse take?
A. Respect the client's confidentiality
, B. Ignore the statement as it is likely delusional
C. Report the incident to the treatment team
D. Ask the roommate to confirm the threat
Rationale: Safety overrides confidentiality. The presence of a weapon on the unit poses
an immediate threat to the client, staff, and others. The nurse has a duty to protect all
parties, so the team must be notified to search the room .
Q3. A nurse is caring for a client who is starting treatment for substance use
disorder. Which action indicates the nurse is practicing the ethical principle of
nonmaleficence?
A. Providing quality care regardless of ability to pay
B. Educating the client about legal rights
C. Withholding a prescribed medication that is causing adverse effects
D. Being truthful about withdrawal manifestations
Rationale: Nonmaleficence means "to do no harm." By stopping a medication causing
harm (adverse effects), the nurse is actively preventing injury. Providing equal care is
justice, educating about rights is autonomy, and truthfulness is veracity .
Q4. A nurse is caring for a client who was involuntarily committed. The client refuses
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). Which action should the nurse take?
A. Ask the family to encourage the client
B. Inform the client that consent is implied due to commitment
C. Document the refusal and notify the provider
D. Tell the client he cannot refuse treatment
Rationale: Involuntary commitment does not remove a client's right to refuse specific
treatments like ECT or medications (except in a true emergency). The nurse acts as the
client's advocate by documenting the refusal and informing the provider .
Q5. A nurse is planning care for a new client. Which action should the nurse plan to
take in order to use the technique of presence to establish the nurse-client
relationship?
, A. Complete a comprehensive health history form
B. Use active listening when with the client
C. Sit behind a desk to maintain professional boundaries
D. Avoid eye contact to reduce intimidation
Rationale: The nurse should use active listening to establish presence with the client.
Presence involves eye contact, body language, voice tone, listening, and reflection to
convey openness and understanding .
Q6. Which of the following actions should the nurse take during the orientation phase
of the therapeutic relationship?
A. Plan for termination of the relationship
B. Establish professional boundaries and discuss confidentiality
C. Summarize goals and achievements
D. Discuss ways to incorporate new healthy behaviors
Rationale: During the orientation phase, the nurse establishes professional boundaries,
discusses confidentiality, defines the purpose of the relationship, and sets goals.
Termination planning occurs later in the working phase .
Q7. A nurse is caring for a client who is experiencing a panic attack. Which action
should the nurse take first?
A. Encourage the client to talk about feelings
B. Stay with the client and provide a quiet environment
C. Administer a PRN benzodiazepine immediately
D. Leave the client alone to calm down
Rationale: During a panic attack, the nurse should stay with the client to provide safety
and reduce fear. A quiet, low-stimulation environment helps decrease anxiety. Medication
may be needed but is not the first action .
Q8. A nurse is using therapeutic communication. Which statement best reflects the
principle of "validation"?
A. "You shouldn't feel that way."
, B. "Tell me more about your childhood."
C. "I can see why you would feel angry given what happened."
D. "Why do you think you are so sad?"
Rationale: Validation acknowledges the patient's feelings without judgment. Option C
shows empathy and acceptance of the patient's emotional experience, which is therapeutic
and helps build trust .
Q9. A nurse is caring for a client who has late-stage Alzheimer's disease. The client
states, "I just came back from a hard day's work in my office." The nurse should
identify this statement as an example of which coping mechanism?
A. Denial
B. Projection
C. Confabulation
D. Repression
Rationale: Confabulation is the creation of information which is untrue to fill in gaps in
memory and to protect self-esteem in clients who have dementia. It is not intentional
deception .
Q10. A client with depression following the death of his wife 3 months ago states, "I
just don't feel like eating because I never like to eat alone." Which action should the
nurse take?
A. Respect the client's statement as a personal preference
B. Encourage the client to skip meals until appetite returns
C. Assess the client for malnutrition risk and involve the dietitian
D. Force the client to eat in the dining room with others
Rationale: This statement indicates the client is at risk for malnutrition and injury due to
inadequate nutritional intake. The nurse should assess nutritional status and involve
appropriate resources .
Q11. A nurse is caring for a client who is experiencing anxiety. Which level of anxiety
is characterized by narrowed perceptual field and difficulty learning?