NU-664C-02-23PCS3 FamilyPsychiatric Ment.Hlth I
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- Week 5: Biopsychosocial Assessment and Mental Status Exam
- Week 5 Discussion 1: Conducting a Mental Status Exam
Week 5 Discussion 1: Conducting a Mental Status Exam
To do: Make forum posts: 1
Value: 100 points
Due: In an effort to facilitate scholarly discourse, create your initial post by Day 4, and reply to at least two of your classmates, on two separate days, by Day 7.
Grading Category: Discussions
Note: In this type of discussion, you will not see the responses of your classmates until after you have posted your own response to the question below.
Initial Post
Please view and select one of the patients depicted in the following videos. Both patients have different diagnoses and presentations—the diagnosis is apparent from the titles and not the focus of the assignment.
The purpose of this assignment is to evaluate the patient and write up a mental status exam on what you observe in the video that you choose.
Your initial post should identify which video you have chosen and should include a detailed mental status exam write-up of that patient. The intent of this exercise is to help you to develop your skills in the assessment of a patient’s mental status and documentation of the mental status exam. Make sure you know the components of a thorough mental status exam prior to completing this assignment. Your texts have many good examples.
Videos to Watch
Please watch the following video clips and write up a mental status of the patients:
- Nathan, Major Depressive Disorder, Recurrent Episode, Severe, Depression Assessment (17:27 minutes)
- Mania (4:20 minutes)
pls choose one from the video transcript below
Primary Care of the Psychiatric Mental Health Client I
Nathan Video Transcript
OFF CAMERA: [00:00:30] Hi Nathan, how are you today?
NATHAN: [00:00:32] OK.
OFF CAMERA: [00:00:34] Tell me what brings you in.
NATHAN: [00:00:41] I just, IÂ’m just worried. I just donÂ’t feel anything anymore.
OFF CAMERA: [00:00:50] Like, you donÂ’t feel happy, you donÂ’t feel sad, like you just feel flat.
NATHAN: [00:00:56] Just numb. Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:00:59] How long you felt like that?
NATHAN: [00:01:06] Past couple months.
NATHAN: [00:01:10] But it happens—like, I felt like this last year too.
OFF CAMERA: [00:01:18] OK. How long did it last last year?
NATHAN: [00:01:24] Like, three or four months maybe.
OFF CAMERA: [00:01:30] Was that the first time last year that you felt kind of just numb for three four months?
NATHAN: [00:01:36] No, itÂ’s been for a while.
OFF CAMERA: [00:01:41] Alright. Do you remember how long?
NATHAN: [00:01:47] Maybe four or five years.
OFF CAMERA: [00:01:56] Is there anything that I mean I just kind of brings it on? Is it time of year, is it– yeah.
NATHAN: [00:02:05] ItÂ’s over summer.
OFF CAMERA: [00:02:07] OK.
OFF CAMERA: [00:02:10] Is there something that happened four or five years ago? Or–
NATHAN: [00:02:16] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:02:17] Tell me what happened.
NATHAN: [00:02:25] My little sister, she was six years old, and she drowned in our backyard pool, while I should have been watching her. And tore my family apart.
OFF CAMERA: [00:02:59] Yeah. Sorry to hear that. So every summer now is there something that reminds you of that incident?
NATHAN: [00:03:18] I donÂ’t know if itÂ’s anything specific. Maybe itÂ’s just it happened kind of close to my momÂ’s birthday. Maybe thatÂ’s– thatÂ’s why. ItÂ’s in June, so–
OFF CAMERA: [00:03:42] So how long have you felt this way right now?
NATHAN: [00:03:49] Do you mean this year?
NATHAN: [00:03:57] I started feeling down, I guess, end of May.
OFF CAMERA: [00:04:06] You said it lasts a few months. And then, is there anything that kind of pulls you out of feeling numb?
NATHAN: [00:04:25] I guess maybe around the holidays, you know, around close family and just that general feeling of the year. Does that sense?
NATHAN: [00:04:42] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:04:45] And that kind of lasts until the next summer.
NATHAN: [00:04:50] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:04:52] OK.
OFF CAMERA: [00:04:55] You ever tried any kind of medication or anything like that before?
NATHAN: [00:05:02] No, I never really– just no.
OFF CAMERA: [00:05:11] So when you start to feel like this, I guess tell me does anything change?
OFF CAMERA: [00:05:19] I mean things in your life that function differently or–
NATHAN: [00:05:28] Everything.
NATHAN: [00:05:38] Probably my work. It’s the biggest thing. IÂ’m not nearly as productive at work as I should be, as I can be. And that kind of feeds everything, you know.
NATHAN: [00:05:58] ItÂ’s five days a week.
NATHAN: [00:06:01] So, yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:06:09] Yeah. Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:06:11] That makes sense.
OFF CAMERA: [00:06:12] What do you do?
NATHAN: [00:06:16] ItÂ’s a desk job.
OFF CAMERA: [00:06:19] You have any difficulty kind of focusing or–
NATHAN: [00:06:26] Yeah, focusing. I make up a lot of excuses for myself.
NATHAN: [00:06:36] Yeah, just my productivity is just bad. But itÂ’s because I donÂ’t feel feel guilty any more for handing in reports late. I donÂ’t feel afraid of losing my job and I donÂ’t even care. I just donÂ’t care.
OFF CAMERA: [00:07:12] So when youÂ’re kind of at work, those thoughts, I guess of– I just– are you thinking you donÂ’t care or do you just feel like you donÂ’t care? Or is it a combination of both of those?
NATHAN: [00:07:27] ItÂ’s just like “whatÂ’s the point?” ItÂ’s mostly organizational work for my boss. You know, setting up PowerPoints, weekly reviews, just stuff theyÂ’re going to look at for a second and then I just need to start on the next one.
NATHAN: [00:07:47] Like, but I also I donÂ’t know what I would do otherwise either.
NATHAN: [00:07:57] ItÂ’s like, I donÂ’t really have a lot of hobbies that I could pursue as a profession.
NATHAN: [00:08:12] I donÂ’t know.
OFF CAMERA: [00:08:17] When youÂ’re not, I guess, kind of feeling like you donÂ’t care or what’s– like thinking “whatÂ’s the point,” how is it different? So letÂ’s say itÂ’s closer to the holiday season and youÂ’re feeling kind of more upbeat.
OFF CAMERA: [00:08:37] Your thoughts then kind of change and you feel more optimistic or you feel–
NATHAN: [00:08:44] Well, my priorities are more organized in that sense. Like, I understand I need to provide for myself, provide for my girlfriend. And yeah, itÂ’s just easier to get through the day.
OFF CAMERA: [00:09:15] How are things between you and your girlfriend?
OFF CAMERA: [00:09:17] I guess when kind of summer comes around?
NATHAN: [00:09:22] It gets rough. She worries about me a lot. And that will cause arguments and blaming and we donÂ’t usually resolve a lot of these. We just kind of leave them “agree to disagree.”
NATHAN: [00:09:58] And I feel like that itÂ’s almost like we kind of just agree to push that aside when the holidays come around.
OFF CAMERA: [00:10:16] But it feels different when the holidays come around.
NATHAN: [00:10:20] Kind of. I donÂ’t know.
NATHAN: [00:10:26] I feel like maybe she might– she might resent me a little bit for being so negative or yeah, bringing her mood down.
OFF CAMERA: [00:10:43] Yeah.
NATHAN: [00:10:47] But again it just turns into like, I donÂ’t feel even the motivation to try and fix it or try and make her day better, and itÂ’s awful.
OFF CAMERA: [00:11:08] Yeah. Do you feel all motivation for anything? Is there anything right now that kind of makes you feel better or lifts your mood or–
NATHAN: [00:11:29] Not really. For a while it was sugar. You know food thatÂ’s not necessarily good for you. And then even after a while that just stopped having an effect, I guess.
OFF CAMERA: [00:12:00] So if you eat, it sounds like your diet changes maybe a bit when you start to feel like this?
NATHAN: [00:12:08] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:12:09] What changes?
NATHAN: [00:12:11] More goes away than anything. ItÂ’s like itÂ’s a medium, you know decent, and then I start to cheat quite a bit and then it kind of just the appetite disappears altogether.
OFF CAMERA: [00:12:33] Yeah. Do you lose weight?
NATHAN: [00:12:34] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:12:36] Have you lost weight over– since you started feeling kind of this way?
NATHAN: [00:12:43] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:12:45] And thatÂ’s kind of an every year thing?
NATHAN: [00:12:48] Yeah. This past year itÂ’s been a little more, more the same. A couple of years ago it was quite a bit more dramatic.
OFF CAMERA: [00:13:10] So when youÂ’re in kind of the spot youÂ’re in right now, do you have any thoughts that kind of come up or that are recurring, like things you keep thinking over and over again?
OFF CAMERA: [00:13:20] Or what would those be?
NATHAN: [00:13:28] I should– I should just give up.
OFF CAMERA: [00:13:37] What do you mean give up?
NATHAN: [00:13:44] Like, I donÂ’t– I donÂ’t see how this can ever be fixed. And if feel like IÂ’m just making everyoneÂ’s life harder by being here and it was my fault.
OFF CAMERA: [00:14:06] What was your fault?
NATHAN: [00:14:09] That Angellica drowned. And I canÂ’t really forgive myself.
NATHAN: [00:14:28] That I deserve to die.
OFF CAMERA: [00:14:34] Do you think about death pretty often?
NATHAN: [00:14:39] Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:14:45] You think sometimes it would be better to die versus live?
NATHAN: [00:14:57] Yeah. I think the world would be better without me in it.
OFF CAMERA: [00:15:12] Do you have any thoughts about killing yourself now?
NATHAN: [00:15:19] Yeah. Yeah.
OFF CAMERA: [00:15:25] What are the thoughts?
NATHAN: [00:15:33] Just kind of when the opportunity if IÂ’m waiting for the bus. You know, IÂ’ll just think I could just– I could just do it right now.
OFF CAMERA: [00:15:55] WhatÂ’s that? Do what?
NATHAN: [00:15:58] Jump in front of it.
NATHAN: [00:16:03] But I never can make myself.
NATHAN: [00:16:28] Maybe I just donÂ’t feel the motivation to even do that.
NATHAN: [00:16:40] I donÂ’t know. But IÂ’m– I just want it to stop.
OFF CAMERA: [00:16:48] What’s that?
NATHAN: [00:16:54] This feeling. Being unable to feel anything except this pit in my stomach.
OFF CAMERA: [00:17:15] Yeah. So you feel like jumping in front of the bus would make that stop?
NATHAN: [00:17:23] Yeah.
Primary Care of the Psychiatric Mental Health Client I
Mania Video Transcript
[OFF CAMERA]: What is so urgent that you cannot stay here?
[MARK]: I have to get to the Capitol Building. I have to get to the Capitol building, you see. They have to hear my speech. I was up all night working on it, and I practiced it too. They have to know whatÂ’s wrong and they have to fix it.
[OFF CAMERA]: WhatÂ’s has to be fixed?
[MARK]: The economy, of course! You see, IÂ’ve had this wonderful idea and no one has thought of it before and itÂ’s going to change the way that we live. And the American people, theyÂ’re depending on me and IÂ’m the only one with the key.
[OFF CAMERA]: What is your solution?
[MARK]: Oh, so many ideas, so fast. ItÂ’s like a news reel and you see all the worldÂ’s news coming in and the paperÂ’s flying. ThatÂ’s what itÂ’s like for me.
[OFF CAMERA]: And these thoughts would help the U.S. economy?
[MARK]: Oh, not just the U.S., the world!
[OFF CAMERA]: Tell me more about your theory.
[MARK]: Well, you see, it involves bringing the Indians to America. The Indian Indians, not the ones that have always been here.
[OFF CAMERA]: So you would bring the people from India to the United States?
[MARK]: And thatÂ’s just the first part! You see, the second part involves a subsidy for corn. OoohÂ… youÂ’re not getting it. I’d much rather wait and explain myself to Congress.
[OFF CAMERA]: Well, do you have other ideas?
[MARK]: Lots. But they come and go so fast, I lose them. ItÂ’s likeÂ… trying to catch a fly with your bare hands. Or uh, uh, tapping. Each tap is an idea.
[OFF CAMERA]: Uh-huh. Have you recently been taking any medications?
[MARK]: No! No medications. Medications disrupt my work.
[OFF CAMERA]: Have you shared your ideas with anybody else?
[MARK]: I keep my plans to myself, you see. My girlfriend doesnÂ’t understand. My friends donÂ’t understand. They all think IÂ’m crazy. Craaazzy Mark!
[OFF CAMERA]: Uh-huh. Do you ever think you’re crazy?
[MARK]: Geniuses are geniuses because theyÂ’re crazy.
[OFF CAMERA]: How have you been sleeping?
[MARK]: Sleeping? I donÂ’t sleep. I donÂ’t want to sleep. I have work to do. And I havenÂ’t slept in 48 hours.
[OFF CAMERA]: So are you tired?
[MARK]: No. IÂ’m like a hurricane. IÂ’m moving forward on air. ItÂ’s a wonderful feeling, you should try it.
[OFF CAMERA]: Your girlfriend mentioned to me that you recently bought lots of movies?
[MARK]: Oh, movies. I love movies. People should see movies. You can never see enough movies.
[OFF CAMERA]: What do you need the movies for?
[MARK]: Research. You knowÂ… I have a library, and movies contribute to my ideas.
[OFF CAMERA]: Do you sometimes feel people misunderstand you?
[MARK]: Of course. You see, people canÂ’t see what IÂ’m thinking, and my thinking is too advanced for most people.
[OFF CAMERA]: What were the movies that you needed to buy?
[MARK]: Spielberg. I realized I only had one Spielberg movie. One. So I realized I had to go and get the rest.
[OFF CAMERA]: All of them?
[MARK]: Formulas. Blockbuster movies are built on formulas. Research is built on formulas. So, I went to the store and I bought the rest of SpielbergÂ’s movies. I cleared the entire shelf.
[OFF CAMERA]: How much did that cost?
[MARK]: Nine hundred dollars. But it was for research.
[OFF CAMERA]: Uh-huh. Have you made any other large purchases?
[MARK]: Well, when I got home I realized you canÂ’t have a large action movie collection without George LucasÂ’ work and James CameronÂ’s and Michael BayÂ’s. And Michael Bay is great with women. He loves beautiful women. HeÂ’sÂ… how to say this nicelyÂ… good with women. And Woody Allen. He loves young, beautiful women too. And I, I had to get all of Woody AllenÂ’s movies. And most of Woody AllenÂ’s movies are set in New York and you canÂ’t have New York movies without King Kong.
[OFF CAMERA]: Oh, you really do love movies?
[MARK]: Oh, I love movies, I love movies, I love movies, I love movies, I love movies. But they bore me.
[OFF CAMERA]: They bore you?
[MARK]: TheyÂ’re not fast enough.
[snaps his fingers]
So I leave the movie theater or my TV and I work on my ideas. Idea number 347, how to reduce traffic accidents. I got that one after watching Grand Theft Auto. Can I tell you about it? ItÂ’s revolutionary.
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