3RD EDITION
MARY ANN BOYD; REBECCA LUEBBERT
TEST BANK
1
Question 1 — Chapter 1: Mental Health and Mental Disorders
— Mental Health and Wellness
Type: Conceptual recall
Stem: A nursing student asks the instructor how “recovery” is
defined in contemporary psychiatric care. Which definition best
reflects the recovery framework described in Essentials of
Psychiatric Nursing?
Options:
A. Recovery means complete symptom elimination and full
return to prior functioning.
B. Recovery is a personal, ongoing process focused on hope,
,empowerment, and meaningful life despite symptoms.
C. Recovery requires long-term residential care to prevent
relapse.
D. Recovery is primarily achieved through pharmacologic
stabilization.
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct: Recovery is framed as a personal,
nonlinear journey emphasizing hope, self-direction,
empowerment, and living a meaningful life even with ongoing
symptoms. (Essentials of Psychiatric Nursing, Ch. 1: Recovery
From Mental Illness). Wolters Kluwer Content Hub
Rationales — Incorrect:
A. Incorrect — Recovery is not defined solely as symptom
elimination; it includes broader psychosocial goals.
C. Incorrect — Long-term residential care may be needed for
some, but recovery is not dependent on institutionalization.
D. Incorrect — Medication can be important, but recovery is
multidimensional (social, vocational, spiritual).
NCLEX/HESI applicability: Links to Psychosocial Integrity and
patient-centered care competencies: recognizing recovery-
oriented goals and supporting patient autonomy.
Teaching Point: Recovery centers on hope, choice, and
meaningful life — not only symptom remission.
Mapping: Chapter 1 — Recovery From Mental Illness — Key
concept: recovery framework and hope. Wolters Kluwer
Content Hub
,2
Question 2 — Chapter 1: Mental Health and Mental Disorders
— Stigma
Type: Application
Stem: A 28-year-old man with a new diagnosis of major
depressive disorder says, “If my manager finds out, they’ll think
I’m weak.” Which nursing response is most therapeutic and
stigma-reducing?
Options:
A. “You should avoid telling anyone at work; it’s nobody’s
business.”
B. “Many people experience depression; it’s a health condition,
not a personal failing.”
C. “If you tell your manager, they’ll probably fire you.”
D. “You need to be tougher; resilience will help you get through
this.”
Correct Answer: B
Rationale — Correct: Normalizing and reframing mental illness
as a health condition reduces shame and counters stigma while
supporting therapeutic rapport (Ch. 1: Mental Health and
Wellness). Wolters Kluwer Content Hub
Rationales — Incorrect:
A. Incorrect — Advising secrecy avoids addressing stigma and
may isolate the patient.
, C. Incorrect — Predicting negative outcomes undermines trust
and may increase anxiety.
D. Incorrect — Blaming or minimizing is nontherapeutic.
NCLEX/HESI applicability: Therapeutic communication and
cultural competence; promotes Psychosocial Integrity
(therapeutic relationship).
Teaching Point: Use nonjudgmental, normalizing language to
reduce stigma.
Mapping: Chapter 1 — Mental Health and Wellness — Key
concept: stigma reduction. Wolters Kluwer Content Hub
3
Question 3 — Chapter 3: Patient Rights and Legal Issues —
Privacy and Confidentiality
Type: Clinical scenario
Stem: A hospitalized patient with mania demands that the
nurse not document their behaviors because “it will ruin my
reputation.” Which action by the nurse is ethically and legally
correct?
Options:
A. Omit documentation of the incident to respect the patient’s
wishes.
B. Document objective observations of behaviors and
interventions while maintaining confidentiality.
C. Refuse to document anything about mental status, citing