Test bank schizophrenia PDF

Title Test bank schizophrenia
Author Emily Akers
Course Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing
Institution James Madison University
Pages 27
File Size 402.6 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 13
Total Views 156

Summary

I paid for these questions. These are NCLEX style questions that help frame your thinking. Also, they used some of these questions on the exams....


Description

SCHIZOPHRENIA 1. A newly admitted patient has the diagnosis of catatonic schizophrenia. Which behavior observed in the patient supports that diagnosis?

a.

Uses a rhyming form of speech

b.

Refuses to eat any unwrapped foods

c.

Laughs when watching a sad movie

d.

Maintains an immobilized state for hours

ANS: D Catatonic schizophrenia is characterized by extremes of psychomotor activity ranging from frenzied behavior to immobilization and may include echopraxia and posturing. Paranoid thinking is characteristic of paranoid schizophrenia. Inappropriate affect and clanging are seen in disorganized schizophrenia. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 274 TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 2. What would be an appropriate short-term outcome for a patient diagnosed with residual schizophrenia who exhibits ambivalence?

a.

Decide their own daily schedule.

b .

Decide which unit groups they will attend.

c.

Choose which clinic staff member to work with.

d .

Choose between two outfits to wear each morning.

ANS: D An early step would be to make choices about nonthreatening matters when presented with limited alternatives. The remaining options represent decisions that are too complicated for the patient to make initially. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 285 TOP: Nursing Process: Outcome Identification MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 3. What is the priority nursing diagnosis for a catatonic patient?

a.

Ineffective coping

b .

Impaired physical mobility

c.

Impaired social interaction

d .

Risk for deficient fluid volume

ANS: D The highest priority for the patient is maintenance of basic physiologic needs, such as hydration. Mobility is of lesser physiological importance than fluid volume. The remaining options do not have priority over a physiological need.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 275 TOP: Nursing Process: Diagnosis MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Basic Care and Comfort 4. Which nursing diagnosis is appropriate for a patient who insists being called Your Highness and demonstrates loosely associated thoughts?

a.

Risk for violence

b.

Defensive coping

c.

Impaired memory

d.

Disturbed thought processes

ANS: D Delusions and loose associations suggest disturbed thought processes. The other options are not supported by data in the scenario. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 278 TOP: Nursing Process: Diagnosis MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 5. Which initial short-term outcome would be appropriate for a patient who was admitted expressing delusional thoughts?

a.

Accept that delusion is illogical.

b .

Distinguish external boundaries.

c.

Explain the basis for the delusions.

d .

Engage in reality-oriented conversation.

ANS: D Delusions are not reality oriented; thus an appropriate outcome would be that patient will engage in reality-oriented conversation rather than discussing delusional beliefs. Delusions are fixed, false beliefs. Patients rarely accept anyone using logic to dispute them. Data are not present to suggest boundary disturbance. Explaining the delusion is not progress; it suggests the patient still holds to the belief. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 286 TOP: Nursing Process: Outcome Identification MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 6. Which of the following interventions should the nurse plan to use to reduce patient focus on delusional thinking?

a.

Confronting the delusion

b .

Refuting the delusion with logic

c.

Exploring reasons the patient has the delusion

d .

Focusing on feelings suggested by the delusion

ANS: D

Focusing on feelings suggested by the delusion will help meet patient needs and help the patient stay based in reality. This technique fosters rapport and trust while discouraging the belief without challenging or refuting it. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 286 TOP: Nursing Process: Planning MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 7. Which assessment observation supports a patients diagnosis of disorganized schizophrenia?

a.

Reports suicidal ideations

b .

Last relapse was 6 years ago

c.

Consistent inappropriate laughing

d .

Believes that the government is out to get me

ANS: C The presence of disorganization and inappropriate affect identifies this disorder as disorganized schizophrenia. The symptoms of residual schizophrenia have long periods of remission. Schizoaffective disorder presents with severe mood disorders along with symptoms of schizophrenia. Paranoid schizophrenia is characterized by persecutory or grandiose delusions. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 274 TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 8. A patient tried to gouge out his eye in response to auditory hallucinations commanding, If thine eye offends thee, pluck it out. The nurse would analyze this behavior as indicating:

a.

Derealization

b .

Inappropriate affect

c.

Impaired impulse control

d .

Inability to manage anger

ANS: C Command hallucinations may be so intense that the patient cannot control the impulse to do what the hallucination tells him to do; thus the patient has impaired impulse control. This is not an anger management problem. Derealization is a feeling that the environment is distorted or unreal and not suggested in the scenario. No evidence of inappropriate affect is given. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 278 TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Reduction of Risk Potential 9. An appropriate intervention for a patient with an identified nursing diagnosis of situational low self-esteem would be:

a.

Providing large muscle activities to relieve stress

b .

Attempting to determine triggers to hallucinations

c.

Engaging patient in activities designed to permit success

d .

Encouraging verbalization of feelings in a safe environment

ANS: C All are useful interventions for a patient with schizophrenia; however, engaging the patient in specifically designed activities is the only option that addresses improving self-esteem. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 285 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 10. A 19-year-old patient is admitted for the second time in 9 months and is acutely psychotic with a diagnosis of undifferentiated schizophrenia. The patient sits alone rubbing her arms and smiling. She tells the nurse her thoughts cause earthquakes and that the world is burning. The nurse assesses the primary deficit associated with the patients condition as:

a.

Social isolation

b .

Disturbed thinking

c.

Altered mood states

d .

Poor impulse control

ANS: B The nurse interprets the patients statements that were not reality-based as indicating disturbed thought processes. Social isolation is not the primary patient problem. No data exist to support the other options. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Pages 278-279 TOP: Nursing Process: Diagnosis MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity

11. A patient has been admitted with disorganized type schizophrenia. The nurse observes blunted affect and social isolation. He occasionally curses or calls another patient a jerk without provocation. The nurse asks the patient how he is feeling, and he responds, Everybody picks on me. They frobitz me. The patients communication exhibits:

a.

A neologism

b .

Loose associations

c.

Delusional thinking

d .

Circumstantial speech

ANS: A A newly coined word having meaning only for the patient is called a neologism (meaning, new word). It is associated with autistic thinking. The patients speech does not show associative looseness or circumstantiality. The use of a neologism is not delusional in and of itself, but it suggests delusional thinking may be present. DIF: Cognitive Level: Comprehension REF: Page 278 TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 12. A patient has been admitted with disorganized type schizophrenia. The nurse asks the patient how he is feeling, and he responds, Everybody picks on me. They frobitz me. The best response for the nurse to make would be:

a.

Thats really too bad that you are being treated that way.

b.

Who do you mean when you say everybody?

c.

What difference does frobitzing make?

d.

Why do they frobitz?

ANS: B This response will help clarify the patients thinking and change the focus from global to specific. In this situation, sympathizing with the patient is a nonproductive response. The remaining options appear to accept the neologism thus supporting the patients delusional thinking. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 286 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 13. Which patient behavior would support the diagnosis of residual schizophrenia with negative symptoms?

a.

Communicating using only rhyming phases

b .

Claims that worms are crawling in my brain

c.

Maintaining both arms suspended awkwardly overhead

d .

Shows no emotion when telling the story of a sisters recent death

ANS: D Blunted affect is considered a negative symptom. The other symptoms would be classified as positive symptoms. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 274 | Page 280

TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 14. By discharge, which outcome is appropriate for a patient who hears voices telling him he is evil?

a.

Respond verbally to the voices.

b .

Verbalize the reason the voices say he is evil.

c.

Identify events that increase anxiety and promote hallucinations.

d .

Integrate the voices into his personality structure in a positive manner.

ANS: C An appropriate outcome for a patient with hallucinations is recognition of events that precede the onset of hallucinations. Trigger events or situations usually cause increased feelings of anxiety. The remaining options are neither desirable nor appropriate. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 277 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 15. Which response by the nurse would best assist a patient in de-escalating aggressive behavior?

a.

Tell me whats going on.

b.

Why are you getting so upset?

c.

If you throw something, you will be restrained.

d.

Its time for group therapy. You can talk there.

ANS: A Using how, what, and when to gather information is a nonthreatening approach. It will promote patient verbalization and explanation of events without causing the patient to become defensive. Mentioning restraints sounds threatening even though it may be meant to remind the patient of limits. Why questions are demanding and threatening to patients. Sending the patient into group therapy sidesteps the problem. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Pages 292-293 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 16. A 34-year-old male admitted with catatonic schizophrenia has been mute and motionless for several days while at home prior to admission. He still appears stuporous in the hospital. Which nursing intervention would be an initial priority?

a.

Orienting the patient to the unit

b .

Reinforcing reality with the patient

c.

Establishing a nonthreatening relationship

d .

Assessing the patient for physical problems

ANS: D Patients who are mute and motionless and inattentive to environmental stimuli are at risk for a number of physical problems. Further, they are unable to communicate existing problems. The

nurse must make thorough and astute assessments before creating plans to meet the patients needs. A patient who is stuporous may not be able to attend to information given about unit rules and protocols. While establishing a therapeutic nurse-patient relationship is an important intervention, it does not have priority according to Maslows hierarchy. Because the patient is mute, one can only suspect lack of reality orientation. While an appropriate intervention, it is not the priority according to Maslows hierarchy. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 275 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity 17. Which response is appropriate when a patients mother expresses guilt over causing my child to be schizophrenic?

a.

I can see how you would be upset over this turn of events.

b .

New findings suggest this disorder is biological in nature.

c.

Dont be so hard on yourself; your daughter needs you to be strong.

d .

Its difficult to see what produces stress for the child at the time its occurring.

ANS: B Many individuals in the mental health field attribute the development of schizophrenia to multiple causes centering on biological theories. The remaining options do little to provide the mother with new information. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 265 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Psychosocial Integrity 18. Which response demonstrates both empathy and understanding of the relationship genetics has to the development of schizophrenia in twins?

a.

In fraternal twins, the chance of the other twin developing the disorder is quite small.

Q

Studies show that 50% of twins develop schizophrenia when it is present in the other twin.

c.

No one can say what will happen, so we will hope for the best for you and both of your sons.

d .

You poor woman! I wish I could tell you that your other son he will be free of the disorder.

ANS: A Current research supports the correct option, whereas the remaining options are not factual and show expressed sympathy rather than empathy. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 266 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Physiological Adaptation 19. The wife of a patient diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia asks, Ive been told that my husbands illness is probably related to imbalanced brain chemicals. Can you be more specific? The response based on the dopamine hypothesis is:

a.

Breakdown of dopamine produces LSD, which in large amounts produces psychosis.

b .

An increase in the brain chemical dopamine explains the presence of delusions and hallucinations.

c.

Decreased amounts of the brain chemical dopamine explain the presence of delusions

and hallucinations.

d .

An increase in the brain chemical dopamine explains the presence of lack of motivation and disordered affect.

ANS: B The statement is correctly based on the dopamine hypotheses while the remaining options are neither known to be true nor based on that theory DIF: Cognitive Level: Comprehension REF: Page 266 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity: Physiological Adaptation 20. What is the basis for the reduction in disturbed thought processes when a patient is administered haloperidol (Haldol)?

a.

Reduction in the number of brain cells that crave dopamine

b .

Dopamine receptors are blocked, making dopamine less available

c.

Dopamine receptors are enhanced, making more dopamine available

d .

Medication causes an increased cellular production of dopamine

ANS: B Excess dopamine is responsible for symptoms of psychosis such as delusions and hallucinations. Blocking dopamine receptors will result in reduction of primary symptoms. The other options do not reflect the action of typical antipsychotic medications.

DIF: Cognitive Level: Comprehension REF: Page 266 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity 21. During a treatment team meeting, the point is made that a patient with schizophrenia has recovered from the acute psychosis but continues to demonstrate apathy, avolition, and blunted affect. The nurse who relates these symptoms to serotonin (5HT2) excess will suggest that the patient receive:

a.

Haloperidol (Haldol)

b .

Chlorpromazine (Thorazine)

c.

Olanzapine (Zyprexa)

d .

Phenelzine (Nardil)

ANS: C Olanzapine is an atypical antipsychotic. Atypical antipsychotic medications are more effective than typical antipsychotics in blocking serotonin receptors and reducing the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Haloperidol (Haldol) and chlorpromazine (Thorazine) are typical antipsychotic medications while phenelzine (Nardil) is an MAOI antidepressant. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 287 | Page 289 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity 22. What response would be anticipated when a patient who received chlorpromazine (Thorazine) for 15 years to treat schizophrenia is switched to Seroquel (quetiapine)?

a.

Development of pseudoparkinsonism

b.

Development of dystonic reactions

c.

Improvement in tardive dyskinesia

d.

Worsening of anticholinergic symptoms

ANS: C Atypical antipsychotics have been noted to block oral dyskinesia and improve tardive dyskinesia as well as improve both positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Pseudoparkinsonism and dystonic reactions are associated with typical antipsychotic medication. Anticholinergic symptoms are not intense with the use of atypical antipsychotic medication. DIF: Cognitive Level: Application REF: Page 287 |Page 289 TOP: Nursing Process: Assessment MSC: NCLEX: Physiological Integrity 23. A patient admitted with the diagnosis of schizophreniform disorder R/O organic pathology. Based on this information, the nurse can expect that the patient will:

a.

Be scheduled for a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) test

b .

See a mental health specialist for extensive psychological testing

c.

Have an immunologic assay performed within 2 days of the admission

d .

Participate in a dexamethasone suppression test (DST) administered by the staff

ANS: A

The MRI will reveal structural changes in the brain that might be responsible for symptoms of psychosis (e.g., abscess, tumor). Psychologic testing may be performed but will be less definitive in ruling out organic pathology. Immunologic studies are not indicated. The DST is related to depression. DIF: Cognitiv...


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