Rapid Mental Health Nursing
eBook - ePub

Rapid Mental Health Nursing

Grahame Smith, Rebecca Rylance

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eBook - ePub

Rapid Mental Health Nursing

Grahame Smith, Rebecca Rylance

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À propos de ce livre

A concise, pocket-sized, A-Z rapid reference handbook on all the essential areas of mental health nursing, aimed at nursing students and newly qualified practitioners.

  • Covers a broad range of mental health disorders, approaches interventions and conditions
  • Easy to locate practical information quickly in a pocket sized, rapid reference format
  • The topics and structure are mapped on to the NMC's (2010) Standards for Pre-registration Nursing Education and their required essential skills and knowledge.

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Informations

Éditeur
Wiley-Blackwell
Année
2016
ISBN
9781119045038

Essential skills and knowledge

Assessment

Background

Assessment is a fundamental part of mental health nursing practice; it establishes an understanding of the service user’s situation through a process of asking questions. Assessment is not a one-off, it is an ongoing process which is built on partnership working, starting with a service user’s admission to mental health services and continuing until they are discharged. Information gathered from the initial assessment process is the first step in planning and delivering care across services to ensure that the care delivered is effective and based upon the service user’s needs.
Assessment can be broadly divided into two categories or methods:
  • formal assessment, including checklists, questionnaires, rating scales, tools, and structured interviews;
  • informal assessment, when information is collected through less formal and planned methods, such as day-to-day observations and interactions.
Both methods provide the mental health nurse with valuable information, and both methods should have equal weight; however, formal assessment tends to be viewed as more objective and value-free. Sometimes this can lead to information gathered through formal assessment methods having more weight than informally gathered information. The strength of using both methods is that information can be triangulated in way that captures the whole clinical picture rather than just part of the picture.
Assessment information should describe the service user’s situation, both generally and specifically; it should also identify the degree to which any identified problem has impacted, and is impacting upon, the service user’s ability to function. To elicit this information the nurse should use:
  • open questions to scope the broad issues;
  • more probing questions to identify the specific issues;
  • closed questions to confirm their understanding of the specific issues is correct.

Professional skills

Mental health nurses should be able to:
  • undertake nursing assessments that are comprehensive, systematic and holistic;
  • utilise assessment information to plan, deliver and evaluate care;
  • work in partnership with the service user, their carers and their families throughout the assessment to negotiate goals and develop a personalised plan of care.

Types of assessment

Mental health nursing assessments should be holistic and, as such, during the assessment process the nurse should gather a wide range of information about the following:
  • physical health and functioning;
  • psychological functioning;
  • social functioning;
  • spiritual needs.
A variety of assessment tools should be used to gather specific information about:
  • risk;
  • history;
  • symptoms;
  • social functioning;
  • quality of life.

Assessment tools

Specific assessment tools used in mental health nursing include:
  • Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (http://www.public-health.uiowa.edu/icmha/outreach/documents/bprs_expanded.pdf);
  • Beck Depression Inventory (http://mhinnovation.net/sites/default/files/downloads/innovation/research/bdi%20with%20interpretation.pdf);
  • Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (http://egret.psychol.cam.ac.uk/medicine/scales/panss.pdf);
  • Beliefs About Voices Questionnaire (http://www.hearingvoices.org.uk/pdf/bavqr.pdf);
  • Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (http://www.yorku.ca/rokada/psyctest/rosenbrg.pdf);
  • Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (http://amhocn.org/static/files/assets/2ad72217/honos_glossary.pdf);
  • Camberwell Assessment of Need (http://www.researchintorecovery.com/files/cansas-p.pdf);
  • Social Functioning Scale (https://mh4ot.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/social-functioning-scale.pdf);
  • Quality of Life Scale (http://www.mentalhealth.com/qol/imhqolscale.pdf);
  • Patient Health Questionnaire (http://phqscreeners.com/pdfs/02_phq-9/english.pdf).

Assessment skills

The therapeutic relationship should drive the assessment process which should be person centred, collaborative and underpinned by the use of effective communication skills such as questioning, active listening, clarifying and summarising. The skills required of mental health nurses are to:
  • interview — ask questions about behaviours and symptoms;
  • observe — record what they see;
  • measure — rate the severity of behaviours and symptoms.
Mental health nurses should utilise all three strategies. It is also important to focus on what the service user can do rather than what they cannot do; this strengths-based approach underpins the recovery process.

Assessment and care delivery

Assessment information is used to inform the delivery of care. It assists the mental health nurse and the service user in partnership to identify what the issues are and what needs to be addressed. The next step after assessment is to consider what the partnership is trying to achieve, and what change the partnership would like to take place and by when. After this step the partnership can consider what interventions would be the most useful, and it is at this stage that the relevant clinical guidelines need to be taken into consideration. The final step is to review the process — were the goals achieved? If not why not? Is there another approach that could be considered? Overall the process should look like this:
  1. assessment;
  2. care planning and goal setting;
  3. care delivery;
  4. evaluation.

Care planning

Background

Care planning follows on from the previous section on assessment. Care planning is concerned with the practice of planning care with a service user in order to meet their individual health and well-being needs. Traditionally, a nurse would assess a service user’s needs, identify their problems, plan care and evaluate the success of the plan. However, there has recently been a significant shift within mental health services to refocus the clinical language to that of goal identification instead of problem identification. When ...

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