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Psychosocial Red Flags For NCLEX: Abuse, DT’s, Suicide & Cognitive Changes

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Manage episode 520128923 series 3700394
Content provided by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Psychosocial Integrity for NCLEX: Abuse, Suicide Risk, and Therapeutic Communication

00:00 – Welcome to Think Like a Nurse

Host intro: Brooke Wallace – ICU nurse, organ transplant coordinator, clinical instructor, published author

Mission: Make complex nursing topics easier to understand, absorb, and apply

Why psychosocial integrity matters: only ~6–12% of the licensing exam, but extremely high-stakes

Focus: safety, ethics, crisis management, communication, culture, cognition, and end-of-life care

Abuse and Neglect: Report Suspicion, Not Proof

Mandatory reporting laws: the key rule → “Report suspicion, not proof.”

The nurse is not a detective; the duty starts at reasonable suspicion

Biggest mistake: waiting, “investigating,” or hoping it doesn’t happen again

Red flags: unexplained bruises, stories that don’t match, fearful or withdrawn client, possible trafficking

Classic NCLEX-style scenario:

Child with spiral fracture, twisting mechanism, terrified of parent → immediate report

Managing Aggression and Restraints: Least to Most Restrictive

Behavioral hierarchy: always least restrictive to most restrictive

Start with: verbal de-escalation, limit setting, behavioral contracts, CPI techniques

When restraints are used:

Only for immediate safety

One-to-one observation required

Safety checks every 15 minutes (skin, circulation, comfort)

Provider order within 1 hour

RN responsibilities vs. UAP:

RN: assess, decide on restraints, re-evaluate need

UAP: may be delegated to sit one-to-one and perform 15-minute safety checks per policy

Substance Use: Alcohol Withdrawal vs. Opioid Withdrawal

High-risk withdrawals: alcohol vs. opioids

Alcohol withdrawal (especially DTs) → can be fatal

Patho: loss of GABA “brakes” → CNS hyperdrive, seizures, autonomic instability

Opioid withdrawal → miserable but rarely fatal

Nausea, vomiting, pain, anxiety

Priority sequence in suspected alcohol withdrawal:

Give thiamine and glucose first to prevent Wernicke–Korsakoff

Then treat withdrawal with benzodiazepines

Tools mentioned: CIWA for alcohol, COWS for opioids

NCLEX scenario: client with DTs seeing bugs/spiders on the wall → safety + benzos

Suicide Risk and Crisis Intervention

Rule #1: Suicide risk is always the priority

Crisis basics: usually time-limited (~6–8 weeks) → aim is return to pre-crisis functioning

Steps: assess lethality and safety → stabilize → support understanding → build coping alternatives

Suicide precautions: one-to-one observation, remove sharps, no cords/belts, environment safety check

These interventions protect both the patient and your license

Coping Mechanisms, Defense Mechanisms, and Communication

Adaptive vs. maladaptive coping

Common defense mechanisms: denial, regression, projection, displacement, rationalization

Example:

Patient says “I’m fine” after a devastating diagnosis → denial

Patient insists “All the nurses hate me, they’re trying to mess up my recovery” → projection

Therapeutic response:

Do not argue with content or delusion

Name and validate the feeling underneath:

“It sounds like you feel like people are working against you right now.”

Cultural Humility and Spiritual Care (LEARN + FICA)

LEARN model:

L – Listen to the client’s perspective

E – Explain your perception

A – Acknowledge differences and similarities

R – Recommend treatment

N – Negotiate a plan together

Key cultural examples:

Jehovah’s Witness → refusal of blood products

Some Hispanic families → strong family involvement in decisions

Muslim clients → modesty, gender concordance if possible

Herbal tea/folk remedies: assess safety and interactions, don’t reflexively say no

FICA framework for spiritual assessment: Faith, Importance, Community, Address in care

Therapeutic Communication: The Most Tested Skill

Goal: build trust and keep the focus on the client’s emotions

What works:

Broad openings (“Tell me more about…”)

Reflection, paraphrasing, clarifying

Open-ended questions

Feeling-focused statements

Example after miscarriage:

Avoid: “It’ll be okay.”

Use: “This is so painful. Tell me what you’re feeling right now.”

What to avoid (communication blocks):

False reassurance (“Don’t worry, everything will be fine.”)

Giving advice

Changing the subject

“Why” questions (makes clients defensive)

58:00 – Cognition, Validation, and End-of-Life Care

Distinguishing:

Delirium – acute, fluctuating, often reversible, worsens at night (sundowning)

Dementia – chronic, progressive decline

Depression – may mimic dementia (pseudodementia), associated with SIG E CAPS–type symptoms

Alzheimer’s example:

“I want to go home.” → use validation (“It sounds like you miss home. Tell me about it.”)

Reserve reorientation for acute delirium

Hospice vs. palliative care:

Hospice: comfort care with limited prognosis, no curative treatment

Palliative: symptom management and quality of life, can occur alongside curative care

Kubler–Ross stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance

Physical signs of impending death: mottling, cool extremities, breathing pattern changes

Family questions about “how long”: focus on listening, fear, and comfort rather than specific timelines

Normal vs. complicated grief: function vs. long-term inability to function (e.g., widowed person still unable to leave home after years)

High-Yield Psychosocial Recap (Top 5 Takeaways)

Therapeutic communication is key – focus on feelings, open-ended questions, no false reassurance.

Abuse and neglect – report on suspicion, don’t wait, don’t investigate independently.

Suicide risk is always priority number one – one-to-one observation and environmental safety.

Alcohol withdrawal can kill – give thiamine and glucose first, then treat with benzodiazepines.

Cultural humility – use frameworks like LEARN to negotiate a care plan that respects the patient’s values and beliefs.

Need to reach out? Send an email to Brooke at [email protected]

  continue reading

40 episodes

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Manage episode 520128923 series 3700394
Content provided by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Audience AI and Brooke Wallace or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Psychosocial Integrity for NCLEX: Abuse, Suicide Risk, and Therapeutic Communication

00:00 – Welcome to Think Like a Nurse

Host intro: Brooke Wallace – ICU nurse, organ transplant coordinator, clinical instructor, published author

Mission: Make complex nursing topics easier to understand, absorb, and apply

Why psychosocial integrity matters: only ~6–12% of the licensing exam, but extremely high-stakes

Focus: safety, ethics, crisis management, communication, culture, cognition, and end-of-life care

Abuse and Neglect: Report Suspicion, Not Proof

Mandatory reporting laws: the key rule → “Report suspicion, not proof.”

The nurse is not a detective; the duty starts at reasonable suspicion

Biggest mistake: waiting, “investigating,” or hoping it doesn’t happen again

Red flags: unexplained bruises, stories that don’t match, fearful or withdrawn client, possible trafficking

Classic NCLEX-style scenario:

Child with spiral fracture, twisting mechanism, terrified of parent → immediate report

Managing Aggression and Restraints: Least to Most Restrictive

Behavioral hierarchy: always least restrictive to most restrictive

Start with: verbal de-escalation, limit setting, behavioral contracts, CPI techniques

When restraints are used:

Only for immediate safety

One-to-one observation required

Safety checks every 15 minutes (skin, circulation, comfort)

Provider order within 1 hour

RN responsibilities vs. UAP:

RN: assess, decide on restraints, re-evaluate need

UAP: may be delegated to sit one-to-one and perform 15-minute safety checks per policy

Substance Use: Alcohol Withdrawal vs. Opioid Withdrawal

High-risk withdrawals: alcohol vs. opioids

Alcohol withdrawal (especially DTs) → can be fatal

Patho: loss of GABA “brakes” → CNS hyperdrive, seizures, autonomic instability

Opioid withdrawal → miserable but rarely fatal

Nausea, vomiting, pain, anxiety

Priority sequence in suspected alcohol withdrawal:

Give thiamine and glucose first to prevent Wernicke–Korsakoff

Then treat withdrawal with benzodiazepines

Tools mentioned: CIWA for alcohol, COWS for opioids

NCLEX scenario: client with DTs seeing bugs/spiders on the wall → safety + benzos

Suicide Risk and Crisis Intervention

Rule #1: Suicide risk is always the priority

Crisis basics: usually time-limited (~6–8 weeks) → aim is return to pre-crisis functioning

Steps: assess lethality and safety → stabilize → support understanding → build coping alternatives

Suicide precautions: one-to-one observation, remove sharps, no cords/belts, environment safety check

These interventions protect both the patient and your license

Coping Mechanisms, Defense Mechanisms, and Communication

Adaptive vs. maladaptive coping

Common defense mechanisms: denial, regression, projection, displacement, rationalization

Example:

Patient says “I’m fine” after a devastating diagnosis → denial

Patient insists “All the nurses hate me, they’re trying to mess up my recovery” → projection

Therapeutic response:

Do not argue with content or delusion

Name and validate the feeling underneath:

“It sounds like you feel like people are working against you right now.”

Cultural Humility and Spiritual Care (LEARN + FICA)

LEARN model:

L – Listen to the client’s perspective

E – Explain your perception

A – Acknowledge differences and similarities

R – Recommend treatment

N – Negotiate a plan together

Key cultural examples:

Jehovah’s Witness → refusal of blood products

Some Hispanic families → strong family involvement in decisions

Muslim clients → modesty, gender concordance if possible

Herbal tea/folk remedies: assess safety and interactions, don’t reflexively say no

FICA framework for spiritual assessment: Faith, Importance, Community, Address in care

Therapeutic Communication: The Most Tested Skill

Goal: build trust and keep the focus on the client’s emotions

What works:

Broad openings (“Tell me more about…”)

Reflection, paraphrasing, clarifying

Open-ended questions

Feeling-focused statements

Example after miscarriage:

Avoid: “It’ll be okay.”

Use: “This is so painful. Tell me what you’re feeling right now.”

What to avoid (communication blocks):

False reassurance (“Don’t worry, everything will be fine.”)

Giving advice

Changing the subject

“Why” questions (makes clients defensive)

58:00 – Cognition, Validation, and End-of-Life Care

Distinguishing:

Delirium – acute, fluctuating, often reversible, worsens at night (sundowning)

Dementia – chronic, progressive decline

Depression – may mimic dementia (pseudodementia), associated with SIG E CAPS–type symptoms

Alzheimer’s example:

“I want to go home.” → use validation (“It sounds like you miss home. Tell me about it.”)

Reserve reorientation for acute delirium

Hospice vs. palliative care:

Hospice: comfort care with limited prognosis, no curative treatment

Palliative: symptom management and quality of life, can occur alongside curative care

Kubler–Ross stages: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance

Physical signs of impending death: mottling, cool extremities, breathing pattern changes

Family questions about “how long”: focus on listening, fear, and comfort rather than specific timelines

Normal vs. complicated grief: function vs. long-term inability to function (e.g., widowed person still unable to leave home after years)

High-Yield Psychosocial Recap (Top 5 Takeaways)

Therapeutic communication is key – focus on feelings, open-ended questions, no false reassurance.

Abuse and neglect – report on suspicion, don’t wait, don’t investigate independently.

Suicide risk is always priority number one – one-to-one observation and environmental safety.

Alcohol withdrawal can kill – give thiamine and glucose first, then treat with benzodiazepines.

Cultural humility – use frameworks like LEARN to negotiate a care plan that respects the patient’s values and beliefs.

Need to reach out? Send an email to Brooke at [email protected]

  continue reading

40 episodes

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