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MH | Therapeutic Communication

MH | Therapeutic Communication

Season 6 Episode 6 Published 2 weeks ago
Description

1. Core Principles & Message Congruency

  • Content vs. Process: Communication involves verbal content and nonverbal process (body language, tone). When messages are incongruent, the nonverbal behavior is always the more accurate reflection of the client's true feelings.
  • Concrete vs. Abstract: Always use explicit, concrete language. High anxiety and cognitive impairment reduce processing ability, making abstract figures of speech and metaphors confusing or dangerous.
  • Active Listening: This requires refraining from planning your next question. The nurse should build follow-up questions directly from the client's overt or covert cues.

2. High-Risk Safety & Boundaries

  • Proxemics: The ideal therapeutic distance is 3 to 6 feet. The intimate zone (0 to 18 inches) is threatening; invading it requires clear permission.
  • Touch Restrictions: Touch is generally avoided in psychiatric settings. Clients with trauma histories or paranoia may interpret touch as a violent threat and strike out. Always verbally prepare the client before touching.
  • Covert Cues & Suicide Risk: Covert cues are vague statements (e.g., "Sleep is good... forever"). The priority action is to clarify intent using direct, concrete, yes-or-no questions about suicidal ideation (e.g., "Are you planning to kill yourself?").

3. Essential Therapeutic Techniques (The "Do's")

  • Broad Openings: Asking "Where would you like to begin?" gives the client control over the interaction.
  • Presenting Reality: Calmly state what is real ("I see no one else in the room") without arguing with or belittling the client's misinterpretations.
  • Reflecting: Direct the client's actions or feelings back to them, promoting independent decision-making.
  • Silence: Expectant silence gives the client time to organize thoughts or regain composure.

4. Dangerous Nontherapeutic Techniques (The "Don'ts")

  • Asking "Why": Asking a client "why" they feel a certain way is intimidating and triggers defensiveness.
  • Giving Advice: Telling the client what to do implies the nurse knows best, stripping the client of autonomy.
  • False Reassurance: Saying "Everything will be alright" devalues the client's severe distress.
  • Challenging: Demanding proof for delusions only causes the client to defend their misperceptions more fiercely.

5. Clinical Interventions & Assertiveness

  • Directive vs. Nondirective: Use a nondirective role (open-ended questions) to let the client lead. Switch to a directive role (direct, yes-or-no questions) during emergencies like suicide risk or psychosis.
  • Problem-Solving: The nurse must guide—never dictate—problem-solving. Clients must choose their own solutions to build self-esteem and ensure follow-through.
  • Assertive Communication: Rely on calm, factual "I" statements. Use the "broken record technique" (repeating a firm refusal without offering justifications) to safely maintain boundaries against persistent requests.
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