1. List and describe events of clinical day in chronological order. The day began with meeting the staff and touring the facility. Then, I sat with the front desk for about 30 minutes and watched their check in process. I spent the rest of the day with an NP. I called each of her patient's back, weighted them, and took their vital sign. I then sat in on each evaluation, total of 16 patients. Diagnosis's ranging from bipolar, depression, anxiety, and schizophrenia. At the end of the day I sat and talked with the NP about my chosen patient's diagnose and prescribed medications. 2. Community mental health clinic A. Select a client observed and state his/her psychiatric diagnoses. Client NB, diagnosed with Anxiety. B. Compare the client’s …show more content…
Differences - I could not distinguish any variations in the textbook description of anxiety. All patient S/S were spot on. C. Describe how the client’s life issues impact his/her mental health. The patient also has peripheral neuropathy and stated concerns about employment. She said she was unable to work full time and was anxious about paying her bills. Also, the impaired physical mobility is socially effecting her life. She pretty much stays at home to herself and has very little interaction with others. Under employment and isolation are feeding her anxiety. 3. Develop an individualized plan of care by selecting one psychosocial focused nursing diagnosis from NANDA list. With the hospice experience the plan of care may be for the family member(s). A. Write a nursing diagnosis with individualized and specific r/t and aeb. Social Isolation r/t - Physical impairment(secondary to peripheral neuropathy), lack of resources, and anxiety aeb - pain, decreased physical mobility(patient walks with a walker), under employment, insomnia, fatigue, impaired concentration, fidgeting, finger tapping, crying, and loss of contact with
From a sociocultural viewpoint would suggest that maybe his race, as well as his country, and social environment could play a role in his schizophrenia also people labeling him as not normal could have played a role in a self fulfilling prophecy. Sociocultural views may also suggest that family stresses may have been a contribution to his schizophrenia.
I chose to write my research paper over Schizophrenia. It is a psychological disorder that I have always found fascinating. It is a serious disorder that consumes a person's life and is nearly impossible to control. In this paper, I will talk about the definition of Schizophrenia, the diagnosis of Schizophrenia, Schizophrenia in children, suicide, sexually related characteristics of the disease, sleep disorders caused by the disease, differences in the disease on different ethnicities, and insensitivity to pain.
A behavioral health physician statement completed by Victorino De Jesus, MD (Internal Medicine), dated 05/10/2017, indicated that the claimant was incapacitated for a single continuous period of time due to her medical condition, including any time for treatment and recovery from 05/09/2017 - 07/09/2017. The claimant had impaired concentration and train of thought that affect work performance. She also had osteoarthritis of the bilateral elbow, hands, fingers, and feet.
The symptoms of schizophrenia vary, however, they have been categorized as positive, negative, and cognitive symptoms. Positive symptoms may include hallucinations, delusions, and / or thought disorder. Hallucinations normally give a false perception of touch, smell, taste, and / or visit, those with this particular mental disorder often experience auditory hallucinations. Delusions are also a sign of schizophrenia. Open quotations delusions are beliefs that are not part of the person's culture and do not change. Quotation parentheses u.s. Department, print the seas, 2010. These may cause a person that has this disorder, to think or feel as if they are victims in imagine conspiracy. It is also shown that they believe they are being controlled
Schizophrenia is classified as hysteria in our camaraderie. If you are diagnosed with schizophrenia, the world and our society now-a-days will deem you unfit and delusional. Schizophrenia is a disease that impinges approximately 1.1% of the population. I am going to be scrutinizing the effects of schizophrenia on the brain and personality. Schizophrenia is a diagnosed mental illness which is known for hallucinations (auditory, visual, tactile, sensory, etc.), and most people believe that if you are schizophrenic you are just psychopathic, and not credible. What I hope to discover is what schizophrenia actually does to the brain and personality, and if that assumption of a psychotic mentality is accurate.
Claimant reports history of multiple medical complaints. Since the age of 60 she reports struggling with urinary incontinence, which impacts her functioning at work. She reports feeling ashamed and guilty that she is unable to control her urination and has the need to periodically utilize the restroom or go to her car taking time away from her responsibilities. In the past few years claimant has severe intensification of physical symptoms, including back pain, right shoulder and hand weakness, blood pressure, headaches, sleep difficulty, and depression-related fluctuating appetite, fatigue and sluggishness. She reports experiencing heart palpitations present (racing heart), dizziness, and fear of actual fainting, a feeling of choking and not being able to breathe, chest pains, nausea or intestinal pains, shortness of breath, tremors in the hands, hot flashes and tunnel vision. The claimant reports that she sleeps very minimally; averaging 3-4 hours of sleep per night on an interrupted basis due to physical and emotional pain. She reports that she has very poor mobility due to pain and depression-related poor motivation.
In this week’s readings chapter twelve is about schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is a psychotic disorder in which personal, social, and occupational functioning deteriorate as a result of strange perceptions, unusual emotions, and motor abnormalities. This disorder is very interesting, but also kind of scary to me. They literally end up in their own world, losing contact with reality. With that, they also experience hallucinations or delusions, which can cause them to do abnormal, possibly dangerous actions. These symptoms must last six months or more before the person can be diagnosed with schizophrenia. It will affect 1 out of 100 people in the world during ones lifetime. This disorder, unlike many others, is just as common among men and women,
Schizophrenia is a chronic brain disorders that affect the way people think, act, their emotions, their daily activities, and their personal tranquility. There is no cure for schizophrenia, but it can be managed with proper treatment. People with schizophrenia may hear voices or they might feel that someone wants to hurt them, they might also have hallucinations. Schizophrenia affects the brain, which alters cognition and contributes to other major problems for instance, the person might have paranoia, delusions, and poor emotional responsiveness. Brain volume, gray matter and withe matter volume in the brain of a person with this disease is reduced compared to healthy people. Scientist believes that schizophrenia runs in families with schizophrenia
Patient is a 76 y/o male that lives with family members and his wife who has Alzheimer’s disease. They live in a single family home with 1 step to enter. Pt has 2 daughters and 1 son who live locally and assist him and his wife with driving to the grocery store. The reason that the patient was referred to Occupational Therapy is because of his decline in strength, decrease in functional mobility, and decrease in transfers along with his reduced participation in his activities of daily living. Pt’s prior level of function was moderate independent with the assist of adaptive equipment such as a rolling walker. His prior level of function doing his ADL’s was moderate independent in hygiene, grooming, bathing, toileting, UB &
When entering the healthcare system, accommodating patients should be a top priority for any nurse. A nursing job can be emotionally and physically exhausting. Because patients are in hospitals and home care facilities throughout the year, it never closes. This forces nurses to be away from their families on weekends and holidays. When having a heart of a nurse, the patient’s health outweighs
I asked the patients, if they needed help and what they prefer to eat first etc….
Throughout psychology today there are six different theoretical models that seek to explain and treat abnormal functioning or behavior. These different models have been a result of different ideas and beliefs over the course of history. As psychology began to grow so did the improvements in research techniques. As a result psychologists are able to explain a variety of disorders in terms of the six different theoretical models. In the movie A Beautiful Mind it follows the mathematician John Nash as he struggles with schizophrenia. It an attempt to explain John Nash’s disorder the six different theoretical models will be looked at, they include biological model, psychodynamic model, behavioral model, cognitive model, humanistic model,
The patient M. is a 26 year old married female who was brought to the ER by her husband after increased anxiety and depression worsened after a “spiritual attack” that lasted for over four days. While in the ER the patient admitted to hearing multiple distant male and female voices all around her head and outside of her head. She states not being able to make out the message but interprets them to be negative in nature. She told the ER Doc she felt people were trying to harm her and that “people in her life have used things against her.” She felt her extended family may have used witchcraft and “chakra dolls” to cast spells on her. She is cognizant of the strangeness of her claims but believes them to be real
Patient also, has history of hypertension, GERD, morbid obesity, anemia, and depression. She reported that the past few months, she has been feeling very weak and overall generalized deconditioning. Her ability to care for herself including her activities of daily living (ADLs), and her basic physical needs (like bathing, grooming, ambulation, meal preparation, transportation, errands, and housekeeping), had decreased, and cannot consistently carry them out.
My interviewee was a 70-year-old female who was re-admitted to CCC in March 7th, this year. Her primary diagnosis was status post CVA with left hemiplegia. Other past medical history includes major depressive disorder, hypertension, hypothyroidism, COPD, anxiety, GERD,