Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Lecture objectives: To understand communication as a nursing skill To distinguish between social and therapeutic communication To identify the goals of therapeutic communication To discuss the critical issues of therapeutic communication To identify and describe techniques that facilitate patient-centered therapeutic communication To identify common causes that interfere with therapeutic communication
Therapeutic communication Interactive verbal and non-verbal strategies that focus on the needs of patients and facilitate a goaldirected, patient-oriented communication process. Therapeutic communication is often time limited. Therapeutic listening
Listening that is focused on patients and obtains therapeutically useful information about patients.
TYPES OF COMMUNICATION
Verbal Environment Nonverbal Electronic
Process: a process-oriented focus is concerned with the how or why verbal content is communicated, or the covert meaning.
METACOMMUNICATION: the communication about communication, a message about the nature of the relationship between the two interacting individuals.
METACOMMUNICATION: the communication about communication, a message about the nature of the relationship between the two interacting individuals. close the window! wouldnt you like to close the window? You must be cold. Im cold, would you please close the window? Why is this window open?
Therapeutic
Purpose To meet the needs of the patient.
Social communication
Personal enjoyment of both parties, both parties seek to get personal needs met.
Content
Planned and directed by Both parties may share the professional to emotional and personal meet patient needs. information. Important for professional to maintain objective professional distance Sharing information is on a need-to-know basis with other professional team members. If parties are friends, shared feelings and emotional material are assumed to be confidential.
Expectations
Therapeutic techniques
Description Offering self Active listening Silence Empathy Questioning General leads Restating Verbalizing the implied Clarification Analysis & Conclusions Making observations Presenting reality Encouraging description of perceptions Voicing doubt Placing an event in time or sequence Encouraging comparisons Identifying themes Summarizing Problem solving & Decisions Suggesting collaboration Encourage goal setting Providing information Encouraging decisions and consideration of options Formulating plan Completion of plans Testing out new behaviors Supportive confrontation Limit setting Feedback Evaluation Encouraging evaluation Reinforcement
WHAT TO AVOID
avoid excessive questions
avoid giving advice avoid giving false reassurance avoid requesting and explanation avoid giving approval
Impaired Social Interaction (insufficient or excessive quantity or ineffective quality of social interaction) Impaired Verbal Communication (decreased, delay, or absent ability to receive, process, transmit and use a system of symbols) Nursing intervention (depends on the etiology and manifestation)
Case scenarios
During a one-to-one interaction with the nurse, a patient frequently looks nervously at the door. What might your response be? What therapeutic technique is this?
Case scenarios
During a one-to-one interaction with the nurse, a patient frequently looks nervously at the door. What might your response be? What therapeutic technique is this? A patient has been withdrawn and suspicious since admission. He is wary of staff and other patients. An example of appropriate use of touch with this patient is
Case scenarios
During a one-to-one interaction with the nurse, a patient frequently looks nervously at the door. What might your response be? What therapeutic technique is this? A patient has been withdrawn and suspicious since admission. He is wary of staff and other patients. An example of appropriate use of touch with this patient is The nurse tells a patient, I noticed that you seemed to become irritated when we discussed your relationship with your husband. The nurse is using the communication technique known as:
Case scenarios
During a one-to-one interaction with the nurse, a patient frequently looks nervously at the door. What might your response be? What therapeutic technique is this? A patient has been withdrawn and suspicious since admission. He is wary of staff and other patients. An example of appropriate use of touch with this patient is The nurse tells a patient, I noticed that you seemed to become irritated when we discussed your relationship with your husband. The nurse is using the communication technique known as
You realize you have just made an insensitive remark to a patient. How might you respond to the patient in a therapeutic manner?
Case scenarios
A patient who is scheduled to attend a number of treatment groups becomes angry and complains, Im really ticked about having to attend all those groups. No one else spends all day in a circle in a little tiny room. How might you respond to this patient? What therapeutic technique are you using?
NURSE-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP
Objectives:
To identify goals of the nurse-patient relationship
NURSE-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP
Stages of the nurse-patient relationship
*planned, patient centered and goal directed*
NURSE-PATIENT RELATIONSHIP
Stages of the nurse-patient relationship
*planned, patient centered and goal directed*
Transference
occurs when a client takes the perceptions and expectations of one person and projects them onto another person (usually the care provider)
Countertransference
occurs when a nurse or care provider takes the perceptions and expectations of one person and projects them onto another person
Transference
occurs when a client takes the perceptions and expectations of one person and projects them onto another person (usually the care provider)
Countertransference
occurs when a nurse or care provider takes the perceptions and expectations of one person and projects them onto another person
case scenarios.
John S. is suspicious, denying his illness, and hyperactive. What combination of nursing interventions would you use in working with him? Does it matter what stage your nurse-patient relationship is? A patient is admitted to an inpatient psychiatric unit for severe depression. Knowing that the patient will be discharged after a short stay what might be your main goals how does this affect how you move through the stages of the therapeutic relationship? A 27-year old patient with schizophrenia says to the nurse, I feel really close to you. Youre the only true friend I have. The most therapeutic response for the nurse to make is:
case scenarios.
A fellow nursing student says to you: I cant get used to doing things like playing cards or having a unit party. They dont seem like a worthwhile use of nursing time. How might you respond to your peer? Describe a strategy that would be useful when the nurse finds that his/her values and the patients values are in conflict.