Week 2: MSE, Risk Assessment Flashcards
What are the 4 primary values that are needed integrated into practice?
- Person centred and holistic healthcare.
- Culturally safe health care.
- Recovery oriented mental health care.
- Trauma informed care.
What information does the MH assessment triangulate?
- Clinical interview (which will elicit cross sectional and longitudinal histories (e.g. family Hx, mental health Hx, substance use Hx).
- Behavioural observations (MSE)
- Rating scales / assessment tools
[All whilst developing therapeutic alliance]
What are the goals of the initial assessment?
- Establishing a therapeutic relationship.
- Obtaining basic information about the person.
- Developing a plan.
- Decreasing the person’s anxieties about therapy and treatment.
- Building hope by communicating that the person is understood and can recover.
What things shape the context / process for assessment in MH nursing?
- MH Act (each state has their own).
- Policy and procedures locally (state/HHS/site).
- Scope of practice and skills of the assessor.
- Specialist clinicians to undertake assessment.
- Preliminary vs ongoing assessment - the nurses role.
- Goals of initial assessment will differ to an ongoing assessment.
- Skill building and symptom management.
What traits and behaviours are expected of a MH nurse?
- A critical observer
- Conscientious attender - the nurse attends to both the process and content of the communication.
- Critical self reflector - the nurse needs to monitor their feelings
- Naive enquirer - blends specific questions into the flow of the interview and avoids asking “why”
- Objective - defers judgment and analysis until the evidence is in
What forms the medical model approach to MH?
- Diagnostic goal
- Diagnostic & Statistical Manual (DSM V)
- Bio psychosocial framework
What is the MH Assessment pathway?
- Hx (developmental, social, medical, psychological, psychiatric)
- Observation
- MSE (theory, research, logical reasoning philosophy)
- Formulation
- Care plan
- Care delivery
Strengths/opportunities, safety, suicide/harm risk
What are the primary assessment outcomes of a MHA
- Assessment leads to clinical formulation.
- Uses biopsychosocial approach
- Why?
- 5P’s = presenting, predisposing, precipitating, perpetuating and protective factors.
- Relevant to clinical presentation, the diagnosis the prognosis and the current risks.
- Treatment plan, action plan, recovery plan, follow up MHA, admission, community, GP etc.
- Risk mitigation - reduce / manage
- Assessment is driven by professional respectful and clinically informed curiosity, underpinned by Roger’s humane principles, and accepting of individual uniqueness
What tasks are undertaken in the initial phase of a MHA?
- Build a therapeutic alliance
- Obtain the psychiatric Hx
- Interview for diagnosis
- Negotiate a treatment plan with your Pt
Daniel Carlat (2005) Instill hope throughout the interview.
Why is the clinical interview so important?
The assessment process in psychiatry relies primarily on the interviewing and observational skills of practitioners because there is no lab test, tissue diagnosis or imaging method available to confirm a psychiatric diagnosis.
What safety features need to be considered throughout MH nursing?
- Providing for the safety of the consumer
- Personal safety of the nurse
- Environment
- Strategies to feel safe
- Exit points, team communication, team approach, consent, and permission, respect.
- Noise, environment, comfort, nourishment, presentation
What are 4 key features of therapeutic engagement?
- Reflect on the stages of relationship building (effective therapeutic alliance, Peplau, Rogers)
- Recognise and validate that the the person is the expert of their own experience.
- Hold hope (for the Pt)
- Safety, collaboration, trust, empowerment.
What are the primary concerns of the opening phase?
- How do we ask questions?
- What brings them to you at this particular point in time?
- What assistance are they seeking?
- What do they see as the main problem?
- Consider how the Pt is presenting
- Decide interviewing priorities.
T/F = curious questions e.g. “why” should be utilised in the opening phase.
FALSE
T/F = You should encourage the Pt to share their narrative experience.
TRUE
T/F = open, closed and transitional questions can and should be utilised throughout the opening phase.
TRUE
What does the MSE provide medical professionals?
It presents a snap shot of a persons mental state in a given period of time.
The MSE represents a cross section of the person’s psychological life and the sum total of a clinician’s observations and impressions at that moment.
What is the purpose of the MSE?
- Serves as a basis for future comparisons and tracking of progress.
- May illicit useful diagnostic information related to medical, neurobiological or psychiatric disorder that affects thought, emotion of behaviour
- Assessment should form the bases of planning and implementation
- Used across many disciplines, portable across practice orentations
- Provides cues for further testing that may be required.
- Frequently a component of referral documentation.
How do nurses obtain a MSE?
A MSE usually can take place in the course of some other activity (here during a comprehensive assessment), therefore there are only a few key areas that require focused attention.
What are the different aspects (overview) of a Mental State Exam?
- Appearance & behaviour
- Speech
- Mood & affect
- Thought form / process
- Thought content
- Perception
- Cognition
- Judgement/insight