Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing by Videbeck

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

118 Unit 2 BUILDING THENURSE–CLIENTRELATIONSHIP


Table 6-1
(Continued)
Therapeutic
Communication Technique Examples Rationale

Nurse says nothing but
continues to maintain eye
contact and conveys
interest.

“Perhaps you and I can
discuss and discover the
triggers for your anxiety.”
“Let’s go to your room, and
I’ll help you find what
your looking for.”
“Have I got this straight?”
“You’ve said that.. .”
“During the past hour, you
and I have discussed.. .”

Client:“I’m dead.”
Nurse:“Are you suggesting
that you feel lifeless?”
Client:“I’m way out in the
ocean.”
Nurse:“You seem to feel
lonely or deserted.”
Client:“I can’t talk to you or
anyone. It’s a waste of
time.” Nurse:“Do you
feel that no one under-
stands?”

“Isn’t that unusual?”
“Really?”
“That’s hard to believe.”

Silence often encourages the client to verbalize,
provided that it is interested and expectant.
Silence gives the client time to organize
thoughts, direct the topic of interaction, or
focus on issues that are most important.
Much nonverbal behavior takes place during
silence, and the nurse needs to be aware of
the client and his or her own nonverbal
behavior.
The nurse seeks to offer a relationship in which
the client can identify problems in living with
others, grow emotionally, and improve the
ability to form satisfactory relationships. The
nurse offers to do things with, rather than for,
the client.
Summarization seeks to bring out the important
points of the discussion and to increase the
awareness and understanding of both partici-
pants. It omits the irrelevant and organizes the
pertinent aspects of the interaction. It allows
both client and nurse to depart with the same
ideas and provides a sense of closure at the
completion of each discussion.
Often what the client says, when taken literally,
seems meaningless or far removed from reality.
To understand, the nurse must concentrate on
what the client might be feeling to express
himself or herself this way.

Putting into words what the client has implied
or said indirectly tends to make the discussion
less obscure. The nurse should be as direct
as possible without being unfeelingly blunt
or obtuse. The client may have difficulty
communicating directly. The nurse should take
care to express only what is fairly obvious;
otherwise the nurse may be jumping to
conclusions or interpreting the client’s
communication.
Another means of responding to distortions of
reality is to express doubt. Such expression
permits the client to become aware that others
do not necessarily perceive events in the same
way or draw the same conclusions. This does
not mean the client will alter his or her point of
view, but at least the nurse will encourage the
client to reconsider or reevaluate what has
happened. The nurse neither agreed nor dis-
agreed; however, he or she has not let the
misperceptions and distortions pass without
comment.

Adapted from Hayes, J. S., & Larsen, K. (1963). Interactions with patients.New York: Macmillan Press.


Silence—absence of verbal
communication, which
provides time for the
client to put thoughts or
feelings into words,
regain composure, or
continue talking

Suggesting collaboration—
offering to share, to strive,
to work with the client for
his or her benefit

Summarizing—organizing
and summing up that
which has gone before

Translating into feelings—
seeking to verbalize
client’s feelings that he
or she expresses only
indirectly

Verbalizing the implied—
voicing what the client
has hinted at or
suggested

Voicing doubt—expressing
uncertainty about the
reality of the client’s
perceptions
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