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Complete Test Bank for Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing for Canadian Practice (4th Edition) by Wendy Austin – Chapters 1–35 Questions & Answers with Rationales” (2)

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Complete Test Bank for Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing for Canadian Practice (4th Edition) by Wendy Austin – Chapters 1–35 Questions & Answers with Rationales”

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is respect for patient autonomy—the right of patients to make decisions about their own bodies and medical
treatments. This principle is enshrined in the legal concept of informed consent. Informed consent requires
healthcare providers to disclose all relevant information about the risks, benefits, and alternatives to a medical
treatment or procedure, allowing patients to make informed decisions.However, challenges arise when patients
are not fully capable of making informed decisions (e.g., due to age, mental illness, or language barriers). In such
cases, ethical dilemmas can arise regarding whether a third party (e.g., a parent or guardian) should make the
decision on the patient’s behalf, and whether the legal framework supports such decisions.#### 2.2 **End-of-
Life Decisions and Euthanasia**End-of-life care, particularly decisions regarding euthanasia, brings about
significant ethical and legal debates. While some argue that individuals should have the right to choose a
dignified death through euthanasia or assisted suicide, others believe that these practices

Test Bank For
Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing for Canadian Practice 4th edition Wendy Austin Questions &
Answers with rationales
Chapter 1


1. During the 1800s, what did Pinel believe that the cure for mental illness was?
A) arrest and confinement
B) early psychotherapy
C) humane treatment
D) the use of chains


2. Who was the psychiatrist who suggested the term “mental hygiene”?
A) Clarence Hincks
B) Sigmund Freud
C) Philippe Pinel
D) Adolf Meyer


3. Before the 19th century, seriously mentally ill clients with severely disturbing
behaviour were usually cared for by:
A) family members at home.
B) spiritual healers in asylums.
C) laypersons in hospitals.
D) staff in prisons and poorhouses.


4. Which variable of communities had the most influence on the early forms of
institutional ways of caring for the mentally ill people?
A) quality of housing and number of professionals
B) social stability and availability of resources
C) political climate and public policy
D) legal structure and role of nurses


5. Which factor has been historically related to increased intolerance and ill
treatment of people with mental disorders?
A) social change and instability
B) increased family size and mobility

, C) emphasis on religious beliefs
D) increased number of asylums treating mentally ill


6. Which effects of industrialization and urbanization contributed positively to the
humane treatment of mentally afflicted treatment? Select all that apply.
A) the growing number of poor and deviant people who were not able to sustain
themselves
B) more general anxieties during a period of rapid social change and instability
C) moral, pedagogical treatment that would help restore innate capacity for self-
control
D) the Enlightenment, which changed medical and social ideas about mental illness
is respect for patient autonomy—the right of patients to make decisions about their own bodies and medical
treatments. This principle is enshrined in the legal concept of informed consent. Informed consent requires healthcare
providers to disclose all relevant information about the risks, benefits, and alternatives to a medical treatment or
procedure, allowing patients to make informed decisions.However, challenges arise when patients are not fully
capable of making informed decisions (e.g., due to age, mental illness, or language barriers). In such cases, ethical
dilemmas can arise regarding whether a third party (e.g., a parent or guardian) should make the decision on the
patient’s behalf, and whether the legal framework supports such decisions.#### 2.2 **End-of-Life Decisions and
Euthanasia**End-of-life care, particularly decisions regarding euthanasia, brings about significant ethical and legal
debates. While some argue that individuals should have the right to choose a dignified death through euthanasia or
assisted suicide, others believe that these practices

E) recognition of mental illness by the medical community


7. Which was a primary reform accomplished by Dorothea Lynde Dix?
A) establishment of “commitment” laws in state legislatures
B) introducing compassion to the care of mentally ill clients
C) use of music to treat mentally ill clients
D) use of exercise therapy to treat mentally ill clients


8. Which province in Canada was first to open a mental institution in 1835?
A) Ontario
B) Nova Scotia
C) Quebec
D) New Brunswick


9. When did involuntary confinement and institutional care of mentally ill people
begin to be the foremost treatment modality?
A) the 17th and 18th centuries
B) end of the 20th century
C) beginning of the 19th century
D) last half of the 19th century


10. Which was developed in 1909 by the National Mental Health Committee for
Mental Hygiene?
A) mental health nurse training
B) stress management clinics
C) prison clinics
D) hydrotherapy centres

, 11. What superintendent of various Ontario psychiatric hospitals was one of the first
health care providers who reformed models of care to improve treatment
approaches in Ontario?
A) Adolf Meyer
B) Clifford Beers
C) Charles K. Clarke
D) Charles A. Barager


12. When did psychiatric nursing education in the general hospital training
commence in eastern Canada?
A) 1860s
B) 1900s
C) 1930s
D) 1950s

is respect for patient autonomy—the right of patients to make decisions about their own bodies and medical
treatments. This principle is enshrined in the legal concept of informed consent. Informed consent requires
healthcare providers to disclose all relevant information about the risks, benefits, and alternatives to a medical
treatment or procedure, allowing patients to make informed decisions.However, challenges arise when patients
are not fully capable of making informed decisions (e.g., due to age, mental illness, or language barriers). In such
cases, ethical dilemmas can arise regarding whether a third party (e.g., a parent or guardian) should make the
decision on the patient’s behalf, and whether the legal framework supports such decisions.#### 2.2 **End-of-
Life Decisions and Euthanasia**End-of-life care, particularly decisions regarding euthanasia, brings about
significant ethical and legal debates. While some argue that individuals should have the right to choose a
dignified death through euthanasia or assisted suicide, others believe that these practices
13. Which level of legislation supported confinement of mentally ill clients in
Canada in the late 19th century?
A) provincial
B) national
C) municipal
D) state


14. In the earliest institutions that cared for mentally ill members of the community,
what was the most common experience of clients?
A) sporadic focus on treatment
B) safer alternative to living in the community
C) emphasis on rehabilitation
D) deplorable living conditions


15. What psychiatrist who had a strong belief in the ability of female compassion and
established a new diploma in Alberta for mental health nurses?
A) Adolf Meyer
B) Charles K. Clarke
C) Clarence Hincks
D) Charles A. Barager


16. Which new type of therapy instituted in the 1940s made skilled nursing essential?
A) cognitive–behavioural therapy
B) electroshock therapy
C) pharmacologic therapy
D) recreational therapy

, 17. Which socioeconomic classes had new opportunities to pursue careers as
psychiatric nurses as the demand for skilled nursing emerged in the 1940s? Select
all that apply.
A) elite class
B) impoverished class
C) unemployed class
D) working class
E) middle class


18. Psychosocial theories of mental disorders, which were proposed in the early


1900s, believe that what factor contributed to disorders?
A) biologic defects
B) dysfunctional family systems
C) environmental and social deprivation
D) unconscious motivators for behaviour


19. What was the major focus of “psychiatric pluralism,” introduced by Adolf
Meyer?
A) integration of the human biologic functions with the environment
B) psychoanalysis integrated with daily activities of living
C) biologic science integrated with bloodletting treatments
D) determining the drives behind the person's behaviours

is respect for patient autonomy—the right of patients to make decisions about their own bodies and medical
treatments. This principle is enshrined in the legal concept of informed consent. Informed consent requires
healthcare providers to disclose all relevant information about the risks, benefits, and alternatives to a medical
treatment or procedure, allowing patients to make informed decisions.However, challenges arise when patients
are not fully capable of making informed decisions (e.g., due to age, mental illness, or language barriers). In such
cases, ethical dilemmas can arise regarding whether a third party (e.g., a parent or guardian) should make the
decision on the patient’s behalf, and whether the legal framework supports such decisions.#### 2.2 **End-of-
Life Decisions and Euthanasia**End-of-life care, particularly decisions regarding euthanasia, brings about
significant ethical and legal debates. While some argue that individuals should have the right to choose a
dignified death through euthanasia or assisted suicide, others believe that these practices
20. Which factor was believed to lead to the development of a psychosis or neurosis
in an individual according to the theory proposed by Sigmund Freud?
A) a chemical imbalance in the brain
B) social deprivation occurred late in adolescence
C) an interference in normal development
D) development of an oedipal relationship


21. Who promoted university-based scientific research to influence change and find
better treatment and support for mentally ill clients?
A) Charles K. Clarke
B) Clifford Beers
C) Adolf Meyer
D) Clarence Hincks


22. Which type of treatment focused most directly on treating the brain, ultimately
facilitating discharges from institutions during the mid-20th century?
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