In this article, we'll explain what you should and shouldn't say to patients in the mental health setting. We'll also explain the phases of the nurse-client relationship, which will help you understand what to do along the timeline of working with a new patient.
This series follows along with our Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Flashcards which are intended to help RN and PN nursing students study for nursing school exams, including the ATI, HESI, and NCLEX.
Phases of the nurse-client relationship
In the mental health setting, you will get assigned new patients and work with them for some duration of time. It's important to understand the phases of this relationship, because each phase requires different tasks and interpersonal interactions. The phases of the nurse-client relationship are pre-orientation, orientation, working, and termination.
Pre-orientation Phase
During the pre-orientation phase, you will prepare for your meeting with the patient. You will review their chart, and examine your thoughts and feelings about working with the patient.
Orientation Phase
During the orientation phase, you will perform introductions with the patient, establish a rapport, establish boundaries, and explain patient confidentiality.
You will set mutually agreed-upon goals with the patient and establish the date, time, place and duration of meetings.
Psychiatric Mental Health - Nursing Flashcards
Working Phase
During the working phase, you will gather data and identify and practice problem-solving skills and coping skills with your patient.
You will provide education to the patient, and then evaluate the progress being made towards the agreed-upon goals.
Termination Phase
The termination phase of the nurse-client relationship comes at the end, and during this phase you will summarize goals that were achieved during the relationship, discuss incorporation of new coping mechanisms and problem-solving skills into the patient's life, and discuss their discharge plans.
During the termination phase, allow time for the patient to share their feelings regarding termination of the relationship. The termination of the relationship may elicit a sense of grief from the patient.
Transference vs. Countertransference
Transference and countertransference are important concepts in psychiatric mental health nursing.
Transference
In the mental health care setting, transference is when a patient redirects (transfers) their feelings about a person from their past onto the nurse.
For example, if a patient had a parent that was abusive, and the nurse reminds the patient of the abusive parent, the patient might transfer their feelings about their parent, onto the nurse, and treat the nurse with hostility.
Transference may interfere with the nurse-client relationship if it results in anger or hostility.
Countertransference
Countertransference is the inverse of transference. Countertransference is the nurse transferring feelings about a person from their past, onto the patient. In this case, the nurse's feelings and responses towards the patient are influenced by their past relationships, and this causes them to treat the patient differently.
This can be a problem if it causes the nurse to treat the patient differently or unjustly. The reason we learn about countertransference is so that if it happens, we can recognize it in ourselves and take steps to ensure that a therapeutic relationship and quality of care is maintained.
In the video, Cathy provides an example from her wound care team. One of Cathy's partners on the team might have a hard time with a certain personality or certain patient, but it may not be something that bothers Cathy. So Cathy can step in to help with this patient. And vice versa. This helps to ensure the patient receives just (fair) care.
Therapeutic Communication
Therapeutic communication is a communication style that is helpful, effective, and promotes the well-being of the patient.
Therapeutic communication techniques
There are a wide variety of therapeutic communication techniques you can use as a nurse. When you are in the learning stage, they may be new to you, and you might feel stilted or rehearsed, but over time they will become easier. You probably already employ some of these communication techniques in other scenarios without even realizing it!
Broad opening remarks
To use the communication technique of broad opening remarks, begin the conversation with a broad question that will allow the patient to direct the conversation where they choose. For example, on meeting with your patient you could begin with, "What would you like to talk about today?"
Here's a hint from outside of the nurse-patient relationship that you'll probably recognize: Broad opening remarks-style questions are often how job interviews begin! "So tell me about yourself/Tell me about your background."
Open-ended questions
Open-ended questions are questions that cannot be answered with only a Yes, No, or single-word answer. They are exploratory questions that prompt the patient to open up and share their thoughts. Open-ended questions more commonly begin with What, How, or "Tell me more about…"
For example, in the mental health setting, if you have a patient who hears voices, you might say, "Tell me more about the voices that you're hearing." This will prompt the patient to begin talking, telling you what the voices are saying to them, which will help you determine if the patient is at risk for harm, or if others are at risk for harm, so you can get the patient the help they need.
Sharing observations
Sharing observations is when you say an observation about how the patient looks, sounds, or acts. You might say, "You seem a little sad to me today," which opens the door for the patient to share more about how they're feeling. They may also share why they are feeling that way.
Clarification/validation
Clarification or validation is when you seek understanding for something that the patient has said that is vague or confusing.
For example, you might ask the clarifying question, "Do I understand you correctly when you say this?"
Reflection
Reflection is a technique to reflect a question back to the patient. For example, if a patient asks, "Do you think I should try that new medication?" then you might respond, "Well, what are your thoughts on that?"
It would not really be appropriate for you to give your opinion or advice, which we will cover later, as a direct answer to their question. You could say, "I can't answer that," which would immediately shut the conversation down, but a reflection is a more therapeutic technique because it keeps the conversation open and allows the patient to make their own decision.
Offering self
Offering self is making yourself available to the patient. If your patient is scared or anxious, the simple act of being there (keeping them company) can be therapeutic.
Restating
Restating is repeating what the patient said back to them, to confirm understanding. Sometimes your wording might change from their wording, and this can help to further clarify.
For example, a patient might say "I'm so anxious that I can't get to sleep," and your restating response might be, "Your anxiety is keeping you up at night."
If it's right, the patient will probably confirm for you, but also, they feel that they have been understood. If it's not right, the patient will correct the record for you.
Presenting reality
Presenting reality is an important communication technique in the mental health setting. It helps a patient to differentiate the real from the unreal. If a patient shares something that does not reflect reality, you can acknowledge that their perception of reality is real to them, but explain what reality actually is.
For example, if you have a patient that is hearing voices, you want to acknowledge that they are hearing voices, but you don't want to validate that there are voices. So you could say, "I understand that you're hearing voices, but I do not hear any voices."
In presenting reality you are stating the facts calmly, not belittling their experience or arguing with them.
Other therapeutic techniques
Silence, eye contact, and therapeutic touch are therapeutic communication techniques that may sometimes be appropriate, but not all the time. Whether or not these are appropriate will vary across individuals, different cultures, religions and more.
Non-therapeutic communication techniques
Non-therapeutic communication techniques are types of communication that you want to avoid as a nurse. We learn about them so we can recognize them and know not to do them!
False reassurance
If you were to say to your patient, "Everything is going to be just fine in the end," that would be false reassurance, and that is not therapeutic.
Passing judgement
Passing judgement is approving or disapproving of the patient or their actions. Approving may seem positive, but it is a judgement and therefore not appropriate. If you were to say, "Yes, you did the right thing," that would not be therapeutic.
Giving advice
Giving advice is something that nurses should avoid. If it starts with "you should" or "you shouldn't," it's not therapeutic.
Close-ended questions
Close-ended questions are yes/no questions, and sometimes questions that can be answered with only one word. The reason that close-ended questions are not therapeutic is that they shut off the conversation when we want to open it up.
Obviously sometimes as a nurse you will need to ask your patient a yes/no question (clarification/validation is an example from the list above) but they should be avoided in cases where you need a patient to open up, provide information or share thoughts and feelings.
Why questions
Asking a patient a question beginning with Why is not therapeutic. For example, "Why are you so angry?" or "Why didn't you follow your treatment plan?" These types of questions will put a patient on the defensive.
Sometimes using the therapeutic technique of sharing observations, will actually elicit the answer to a why question. Sharing observations is therapeutic, while asking direct Why questions is not. Sharing observations is a gentler delivery that uses indirect speech which helps to avoid putting people on the defensive.
We use indirect speech to varying degrees in our lives all the time, but it can be especially important when in the mental healthcare setting.
Leading or biased questions
Leading or biased questions are questions phrased in such a way that you are communicating that you expect a specific answer. This is not therapeutic because patients may not feel safe or accepted to give the true answer. For example, "You don't smoke, do you?"
Changing the subject
The last non-therapeutic communication technique we'll share here is changing the subject. For example, if your patient brings something up and you said, "Let's talk about something else," that would be changing the subject. It's not therapeutic because it blocks communication and dissuades the patient from sharing again in the future.
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