Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing by Videbeck

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

6 THERAPEUTICCOMMUNICATION 113


if interacting in the client’s room is therapeutic. For
example, if the client has difficulty maintaining bound-
aries or has been making sexual comments, then the
client’s room is not the best setting. A more formal set-
ting would be desirable.
Proxemicsis the study of distance zones between
people during communication. People feel more com-
fortable with smaller distances when communicating
with someone they know rather than with strangers
(Northouse & Northouse, 1998). People from the Uni-
ted States, Canada, and many Eastern European
nations generally observe four distance zones:



  • Intimate zone(0 to 18 inches between
    people): This amount of space is comfortable
    for parents with young children, people who
    mutually desire personal contact, or people
    whispering. Invasion of this intimate zone
    by anyone else is threatening and produces
    anxiety.

  • Personal zone(18 to 36 inches): This dis-
    tance is comfortable between family and
    friends who are talking.

  • Social zone(4 to 12 feet): This distance is
    acceptable for communication in social, work,
    and business settings.

  • Public zone(12 to 25 feet): This is an
    acceptable distance between a speaker and
    an audience, small groups, and other
    informal functions (Hall, 1963).
    People from some cultures (e.g., Hispanic,
    Mediterranean, East Indian, Asian, Middle Eastern)
    are more comfortable with less than 4 to 12 feet of
    space between them while talking. The nurse of
    European-American or African-American heritage
    may feel uncomfortable if clients from these cultures
    stand close when talking. Conversely, clients from
    these backgrounds may perceive the nurse as remote
    and indifferent (Andrews & Boyle, 2003).
    Both the client and the nurse can feel threatened
    if one invades the other’s personal or intimate zone,
    which can result in tension, irritability, fidgeting, or
    even flight. When the nurse must invade the inti-
    mate or personal zone, he or she always should ask
    the client’s permission. For example, if a nurse per-
    forming an assessment in a community setting needs
    to take the client’s blood pressure, he or she should
    say, “Mr. Smith, to take your blood pressure I will
    wrap this cuff around your arm and listen with my
    stethoscope. Is this acceptable to you?” He or she
    should ask permission in a yes/no format so the client’s
    response is clear. This is one of the times when yes/
    no questions are appropriate.
    The therapeutic communication interaction is
    most comfortable when the nurse and client are 3 to
    6 feet apart. If a client invades the nurse’s intimate
    space (0 to 18 inches), the nurse should set limits grad-


ually, depending on how often the client has invaded
the nurse’s space and the safety of the situation.

Touch
As intimacy increases, the need for distance decreases.
Knapp (1980) identified five types of touch:


  • Functional-professionaltouch is used in
    examinations or procedures such as when
    the nurse touches a client to assess skin
    turgor or a masseuse performs a massage.

  • Social-politetouch is used in greeting, such
    as a handshake and the “air kisses” some
    women use to greet acquaintances, or when
    a gentle hand guides someone in the correct
    direction.

  • Friendship-warmthtouch involves a hug in
    greeting, an arm thrown around the shoulder
    of a good friend, or the back slapping some
    men use to greet friends and relatives.

  • Love-intimacytouch involves tight hugs and
    kisses between lovers or close relatives.

  • Sexual-arousaltouch is used by lovers.
    Touching a client can be comforting and sup-
    portive when it is welcome and permitted. The nurse
    should observe the client for cues that show if touch is
    desired or indicated. For example, holding the hand
    of a sobbing mother whose child is ill is appropriate
    and therapeutic. If the mother pulls her hand away,
    however, she signals to the nurse that she feels un-
    comfortable being touched. The nurse also can ask
    the client about touching (e.g., “Would it help you to
    squeeze my hand?”).
    Although touch can be comforting and therapeu-
    tic, it is an invasion of intimate and personal space.
    Some clients with mental illness have difficulty under-
    standing the concept of personal boundaries or know-
    ing when touch is or is not appropriate. Consequently
    most psychiatric inpatient, outpatient, and ambula-
    tory care units have policies against clients touching
    one another or staff. Unless they need to get close to a
    client to perform some nursing care, staff members
    should serve as role models and refrain from invading
    clients’ personal and intimate space. When a staff
    member is going to touch a client while performing
    nursing care, he or she must verbally prepare the
    client before starting the procedure. A client with
    paranoia may interpret being touched as a threat and
    may attempt to protect himself or herself by striking
    the staff person.


Active Listening and Observation
To receive the sender’s simultaneous messages, the
nurse must use active listening and active observa-
tion. Active listeningmeans refraining from other
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