Mental Health NCLEX Practice Questions with Answers
Practice 30 mental health and psychiatric NCLEX questions with answers and rationales. Therapeutic communication, suicide risk, lithium, and more.
30 Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing NCLEX Practice Questions with Answers
Mental health and psychiatric nursing questions test whether you can recognize safety risks, use therapeutic communication, manage psychiatric medications, and respond to clients in crisis. This free 30-question NCLEX practice set covers every high-yield topic you need to master: therapeutic communication, suicide risk assessment, hallucinations, delusions, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, lithium safety, antidepressant safety, MAOI diet teaching, panic attacks, PTSD, OCD, borderline personality disorder, alcohol withdrawal, eating disorders, restraints, ECT, and client rights. Every question includes a detailed rationale explaining why the correct answer is right, why each distractor is wrong, the distractor trap analysis, a clinical mnemonic, and a test-day tip. No signup required.
Practice all 30 Mental Health questions together
Work through every question on this page in one continuous NCLEX-style session — with progress tracking, Next / Previous navigation, and the same exam-day interface you'll see on test day.
Question 1: Therapeutic Communication — Reflecting Feelings
A client admitted with major depressive disorder tells the nurse, “Everyone keeps telling me I should be grateful, but I just feel empty.” Which response by the nurse is most therapeutic?
The best response is the one that reflects the client’s feeling: the nurse names the emotional pain without judging it or trying to fix it immediately.
This uses the therapeutic communication framework of active listening, reflection, and validation. When a client expresses sadness, emptiness, fear, or hopelessness, the nurse should first acknowledge the feeling and invite more discussion.
In major depressive disorder, the client’s mood, thinking, energy, and sense of worth may be impaired. Forced positivity can worsen guilt or shame because the client may already believe they “should” feel better but cannot.
Clinical pearl: therapeutic communication does not mean giving advice right away. The nurse first creates emotional safety, then assesses further, including safety concerns if the client expresses hopelessness, death wishes, or self-harm thoughts.
The most tempting distractor is suggesting positive thoughts. That strategy may be useful later in therapy, but at this moment it redirects the conversation before the client’s pain has been acknowledged.
Question 2: Suicide Risk — Direct Suicide Assessment
A client in an outpatient mental health setting states, “I gave my favorite watch to my brother because I will not need it anymore.” Which response by the nurse takes priority?
The priority response is to ask directly whether the client is thinking about killing themself. Giving away a valued possession and saying it will not be needed anymore can signal suicidal ideation or preparation.
This question uses a safety-first framework: when a client gives a possible suicide warning sign, the nurse must assess suicide risk before offering support, exploring feelings, or involving others.
The key idea is that suicidal thoughts often include feelings of hopelessness, finality, or preparation for death. Giving away important belongings can be one visible clue that the client may be planning self-harm.
Clinical pearl: asking directly about suicide does not put the idea into the client’s mind. It opens the door for honest assessment and immediate protection.
The most tempting distractor is asking why the client gave away the watch. That is open-ended and sounds therapeutic, but it delays the direct safety assessment that must happen first.
Question 3: Command Hallucinations — Immediate Safety Intervention
A client diagnosed with schizophrenia tells the nurse, “The voice says I must stab the person in the next room.” Which action should the nurse take first?
The correct action is to stay with the client and secure the area. A command hallucination telling the client to harm another person is an immediate safety threat.
The priority framework is safety first. The nurse must protect the client, the identified potential victim, other clients, and staff before exploring feelings, teaching coping skills, or documenting.
In schizophrenia, hallucinations are false sensory perceptions that can feel real to the client. A command hallucination is especially concerning when it directs the client to hurt self or others.
Clinical pearl: any hallucination that includes harm, suicide, homicide, or loss of control requires immediate risk reduction and rapid team support.
The tempting distractor is to ask more about the voice and document it. That assessment is appropriate later, but it does not immediately prevent injury.
Question 4: Delusions — Presenting Reality Without Arguing
A client on an inpatient psychiatric unit states, “The hospital cameras are sending my thoughts to the government.” Which response by the nurse is most therapeutic?
The best response is to present reality calmly while also helping the client feel safe. The nurse should not agree with the delusion, but also should not argue or try to prove the client wrong.
This question tests the NCJMM step of taking action: the nurse must choose the most therapeutic response to a client experiencing a paranoid delusion. The safest communication framework is to acknowledge the emotion, state reality briefly, and avoid debate.
A delusion is a fixed false belief that does not change with logical evidence. During psychosis, arguing can increase fear, mistrust, and defensiveness.
Clinical pearl: when a client expresses a delusion, respond to the client’s feelings and safety needs, not to the details of the false belief.
The tempting distractor is the response that tries to correct the belief by saying cameras cannot read thoughts. That may be factually true, but it is not therapeutic because it argues with the delusion.
Question 5: Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia
A nurse is assessing a client diagnosed with schizophrenia. Which assessment finding is most consistent with a negative symptom?
The correct finding is the one showing little speech and flat affect. These are negative symptoms because normal emotional expression and communication are decreased or missing.
The clinical reasoning is recognize cues: the nurse must identify which assessment cue fits the category of negative symptoms in schizophrenia.
Think of negative symptoms as normal function being taken away. Common examples include reduced emotional expression, decreased speech, poor motivation, loss of pleasure, and social withdrawal.
Positive symptoms are different because they are added symptoms, such as hallucinations, delusions, and disorganized speech.
The most tempting distractors are hallucinations, such as feeling insects on the skin or hearing voices. These are important findings to assess for safety, but they are positive symptoms, not negative symptoms.
Question 6: Mania — Managing Manic Behavior
A client with acute mania is pacing in the hallway, frequently interrupting others, and eating very little during meals. Which nursing intervention is most appropriate?
The best answer is to provide finger foods and reduce stimulation. A client with acute mania often cannot sit still long enough to eat, so portable foods and fluids help maintain nutrition and hydration.
The priority framework is Maslow's hierarchy and safety: meet physiologic needs, decrease environmental triggers, and prevent exhaustion before focusing on insight or group participation.
In mania, elevated mood and increased psychomotor activity can lead to poor sleep, high energy use, distractibility, and impulsive behavior. This makes weight loss, dehydration, and exhaustion real risks.
- Clinical pearl: For acute mania, choose interventions that support safety, nutrition, hydration, sleep, and low stimulation.
- Warning sign: Little sleep with constant activity can quickly lead to physiologic exhaustion.
The tempting distractor is asking the client to lead a group activity, but that adds stimulation and social pressure. Group leadership may be considered only after manic symptoms are controlled.
Question 7: Lithium Teaching During Illness
A client who takes lithium reports vomiting and diarrhea for the past 24 hours after a gastrointestinal illness. Which instruction is most appropriate for the nurse to provide?
The correct answer is to hold lithium and contact the provider. Vomiting and diarrhea can cause dehydration and sodium loss, which can raise lithium levels and increase the risk for toxicity.
The clinical reasoning is medication safety: the nurse must connect the illness symptoms to a possible drug complication, then choose the safest action. Because lithium has a narrow therapeutic index, the client should not simply take another dose during a significant fluid-loss illness.
Lithium is eliminated by the kidneys. When the body is low on sodium or fluid, the kidneys may retain more lithium along with sodium, causing the serum lithium level to rise.
- Warning signs: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, tremor, confusion, ataxia, increasing drowsiness, or muscle weakness.
- Test-day pearl: gastrointestinal illness, dehydration, heavy sweating, or major sodium changes in a client taking lithium requires follow-up.
The tempting answer is taking the next dose with extra water, but that is not enough after 24 hours of vomiting and diarrhea. The safer action is to stop the dose temporarily and get provider instructions.
Question 8: Lithium Toxicity — Recognizing Toxicity
A nurse is reviewing assessment findings for a client who is prescribed lithium for bipolar disorder. Which finding requires the most immediate follow-up?
The most urgent finding is confusion and ataxia because these are neurologic signs of possible lithium toxicity. Lithium toxicity can worsen quickly and may lead to severe central nervous system effects, including seizures.
The clinical judgment step is recognize cues: the nurse must identify which assessment finding is abnormal and dangerous, not just expected with therapy.
Lithium is cleared mainly by the kidneys and has a narrow therapeutic index. Dehydration, low sodium intake, renal impairment, and some medications can increase lithium levels.
- Expected or less urgent: mild thirst, metallic taste, fine hand tremor.
- Concerning for toxicity: confusion, ataxia, coarse or worsening tremor, vomiting, diarrhea, severe drowsiness, or seizures.
The tempting distractor is a fine hand tremor. A fine tremor can be expected, but a coarse or worsening tremor with neurologic or gastrointestinal symptoms is not benign.
Question 9: Serotonin Syndrome — Distinguishing From NMS
A client who takes sertraline started tramadol yesterday. The client is anxious and diaphoretic with diarrhea, tremor, hyperreflexia, temperature 101.5°F (38.6°C), and pulse 122/min. Which condition should the nurse suspect?
The nurse should suspect serotonin syndrome. The key clues are a new serotonergic medication combination, rapid onset, anxiety, diaphoresis, diarrhea, tremor, hyperreflexia, fever, and tachycardia.
This is a prioritize-hypotheses question: the nurse must compare possible causes of fever and autonomic instability and choose the condition that best matches the cues.
Sertraline increases serotonin by blocking serotonin reuptake. Tramadol can also increase serotonergic activity, so the combination can cause excess serotonin in the central and peripheral nervous systems.
- Serotonin syndrome: hyperreflexia, tremor, clonus, diarrhea, diaphoresis, rapid onset.
- Neuroleptic malignant syndrome: dopamine-blocker exposure, severe rigidity, slower onset over days.
Test-day pearl: In a client with fever and tachycardia, hyperreflexia plus GI symptoms strongly favors serotonin syndrome over neuroleptic malignant syndrome.
Question 10: Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome — Distinguishing From Serotonin Syndrome
A client receiving haloperidol develops severe generalized rigidity, confusion, diaphoresis, labile blood pressure, and a temperature of 103.8°F (39.9°C) . Which action should the nurse take first?
The correct first action is to hold haloperidol and notify the provider. The client is showing classic signs of neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS), which is a life-threatening reaction to dopamine-blocking medications.
The key clinical judgment step is analyzing the cues: fever, severe rigidity, altered mental status, diaphoresis, and unstable blood pressure together point to NMS, not a mild medication side effect.
NMS occurs when dopamine blockade disrupts thermoregulation and muscle control, causing severe rigidity and hyperthermia. This can lead to rhabdomyolysis, kidney injury, dysrhythmias, and death if treatment is delayed.
Clinical pearl: fever plus severe “lead-pipe” rigidity in a client taking an antipsychotic is an emergency. Do not wait and reassess later.
The most tempting distractor is benztropine. It can help acute dystonia or parkinsonian extrapyramidal symptoms, but it is not the priority treatment for NMS.
Question 11: Acute Dystonia — Extrapyramidal Side Effect
A client who recently received haloperidol develops sudden neck stiffness, facial grimacing, and sustained upward deviation of the eyes. Which medication should the nurse anticipate administering?
The correct answer is benztropine. The client has sudden neck stiffness, facial grimacing, and upward eye deviation after receiving haloperidol, which is most consistent with an acute dystonic reaction.
The clinical reasoning step is to analyze the cues: abnormal sustained muscle contractions after an antipsychotic point to an extrapyramidal symptom, not a new psychiatric diagnosis.
Haloperidol blocks dopamine receptors. Reduced dopamine activity in motor pathways creates a relative excess of acetylcholine, so an anticholinergic medication such as benztropine helps relieve the dystonia.
Clinical pearl: acute dystonia can be frightening and may become dangerous if the muscles of the throat or airway are involved. The nurse should monitor airway and breathing while preparing the prescribed medication.
The most tempting distractors are other psychiatric medications, but they do not reverse this reaction. Sertraline treats depression and anxiety, and lithium treats bipolar disorder; neither is the antidote for acute dystonia.
Question 12: Tardive Dyskinesia — Long-Term Antipsychotic Adverse Effect
A client who has taken an antipsychotic medication for several years is observed repeatedly smacking the lips, protruding the tongue, and making chewing motions. Which nursing action is most appropriate?
The correct action is to notify the provider about the movements. Lip smacking, tongue protrusion, and chewing motions after years of antipsychotic use strongly suggest tardive dyskinesia.
The clinical reasoning step is analyze cues: the nurse must connect the abnormal involuntary movements with a medication adverse effect, then take the appropriate next action.
Tardive dyskinesia is linked to long-term dopamine-blocking medications. Chronic dopamine receptor blockade can lead to receptor sensitivity changes, causing involuntary repetitive movements, especially of the face, mouth, tongue, jaw, and sometimes the extremities.
Clinical pearl: “tardive” means late. New repetitive mouth or tongue movements in a client taking antipsychotics long term should be reported because symptoms may persist and require medication review.
The tempting distractor is giving a sedative, but that treats presumed agitation, not the underlying medication-related movement disorder. Sedation can mask the problem and delay proper follow-up.
Question 13: MAOI Teaching — Tyramine-Related Hypertensive Crisis
A client who takes phenelzine for depression reports a sudden severe headache and palpitations after eating at a party. Which food is most likely associated with this reaction?
The correct answer is the aged dairy product. Phenelzine is a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI), and MAOIs can cause a dangerous reaction when taken with foods high in tyramine.
The clinical reasoning step is analyze cues: the nurse links severe headache and palpitations after eating to a tyramine-related hypertensive crisis.
Normally, monoamine oxidase helps break down tyramine. When MAO is inhibited, tyramine can build up and trigger excess norepinephrine release, causing vasoconstriction, tachycardia, and severe hypertension.
Clinical pearl: In a client taking an MAOI, a sudden severe headache after eating aged, cured, smoked, fermented, pickled, or spoiled foods is an emergency warning sign.
The tempting distractors are ordinary fresh or plain foods. They are not classic high-tyramine foods because they are not aged or fermented.
Question 14: Antidepressants and Suicide Safety — Early Treatment Risk
A client with severe major depressive disorder has taken a prescribed antidepressant for 2 weeks. The client is more active and attending unit activities but states, “I still do not see any reason to live.” Which action should the nurse take first?
The priority is to reassess suicide risk and maintain suicide precautions. The client is more active, but the statement about having no reason to live shows that hopelessness is still present.
This question uses a safety-first priority framework: when there is any cue for possible self-harm, the nurse protects the client before teaching, encouraging independence, or giving reassurance.
Early in antidepressant therapy, energy and activity can improve before mood, hopelessness, and suicidal thoughts fully improve. This can create a dangerous window because the client may now have more ability to act on suicidal thoughts.
Clinical pearl: Any statement such as “I do not want to live,” “There is no reason to go on,” or “Everyone would be better off without me” requires direct suicide-risk assessment.
The tempting distractor is assuming that improved activity means recovery. Activity alone does not prove safety when the client is still expressing hopelessness.
Question 15: Panic Attack — Immediate Intervention
A client in the dayroom is trembling, hyperventilating, and states, “I am going to die.” Which action should the nurse take first?
The correct action is to stay nearby and give brief directions. The client is showing panic-level anxiety, so the priority is immediate safety, calm presence, and simple instructions.
Use the priority framework of safety first and the NCJMM step take actions: the nurse must choose the best first intervention for an acute mental health crisis. During panic, the client cannot process long explanations, complex questions, or future-focused teaching.
Physiologically, panic activates the sympathetic nervous system, causing trembling, rapid breathing, chest tightness, fear of dying, and a sense of losing control. Hyperventilation can worsen dizziness, tingling, and the feeling of impending doom.
Clinical pearl: during panic, choose presence, calm voice, low stimulation, and short concrete directions. Teaching and insight-oriented discussion come later, after anxiety decreases.
The most tempting distractor is asking what triggered the episode. That question may be helpful later, but during panic it demands too much cognitive processing and does not first stabilize the client.
Question 16: PTSD Flashback — Grounding During Flashback
A client with posttraumatic stress disorder suddenly crouches under a table and says, “The explosion is happening again.” Which response by the nurse is best?
The best response is to calmly orient the client to the present: the client is in the hospital and safe. This is a grounding response, which helps the client reconnect with the current environment during a PTSD flashback.
The clinical priority is safety and therapeutic communication. Using the NCJMM, the nurse recognizes the cue as a flashback, then takes action by reducing fear and supporting present-moment awareness.
In PTSD, trauma reminders can activate the stress response as if danger is happening now. The client may feel, see, or hear parts of the traumatic event and may have difficulty separating memory from the present moment.
Clinical pearl: during a flashback, keep words simple, calm, and present-focused. Orient to place, time, and safety before asking about feelings or trauma details.
The most tempting distractor is asking the client to describe what is remembered. That may be useful later in therapy, but during an active flashback it can intensify distress and deepen reexperiencing.
Question 17: Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder — Response Prevention
A client with obsessive-compulsive disorder becomes visibly anxious after touching a door handle and asks to wash the hands immediately. The plan of care includes gradual delay of compulsive handwashing. Which nursing response is most therapeutic?
The best response is to ask the client to delay handwashing for a short, specific time with the nurse's support. This matches exposure and response prevention, a common behavioral approach for obsessive-compulsive disorder.
The clinical reasoning is take action using therapeutic communication: support the client, set a realistic limit, and avoid reinforcing the compulsion.
In OCD, an obsession creates anxiety, and the compulsion temporarily lowers that anxiety. The problem is that the relief reinforces the ritual, so the cycle continues.
- Helpful: gradual delay, calm support, and repeated practice.
- Harmful: abruptly forbidding rituals, arguing about the fear, or allowing immediate ritual completion.
Clinical pearl: Do not tell the client the fear is irrational or that there is “no reason” to feel anxious. The nurse should validate the distress while helping the client resist the ritual in a structured way.
The most tempting distractor is allowing washing “one more time,” but this still reinforces the compulsion and weakens response prevention.
Question 18: Borderline Personality Disorder — Consistent Limits and Splitting
A client diagnosed with borderline personality disorder tells the nurse, “The night nurse lets me stay in the lounge after hours. You are the only one who doesn’t care.” Which response by the nurse is most appropriate?
The correct response is the one that calmly states the unit rule: the lounge closes at 10 PM. This sets a clear boundary without arguing, blaming, or making an exception.
The clinical reasoning is therapeutic limit setting: the nurse recognizes a possible attempt to compare staff and chooses the response that is firm, neutral, and consistent. Consistency helps reduce splitting and protects the therapeutic milieu.
Borderline personality disorder is associated with unstable relationships, intense emotions, fear of abandonment, impulsivity, and black-and-white thinking. When distress increases, the client may see one staff member as “good” and another as “bad.”
Clinical pearl: set limits first, then offer support. A calm boundary is therapeutic; a harsh accusation is not.
The tempting distractor is telling the client they are trying to split the staff. Although splitting may be occurring, saying this directly is accusatory and can escalate the interaction.
Question 19: Alcohol Withdrawal — Acute Withdrawal Priority
A client stopped heavy alcohol use 24 hours ago and now has tremors, diaphoresis, agitation, blood pressure 168/96 mm Hg, and pulse 118/min. Which prescription should the nurse question?
The nurse should question disulfiram because it is not used to treat acute alcohol withdrawal. This client has withdrawal with autonomic hyperactivity, shown by tremors, sweating, agitation, hypertension, and tachycardia.
The clinical reasoning is acute stabilization first: protect the client from withdrawal complications such as seizures and delirium tremens. Benzodiazepines, thiamine, and frequent withdrawal assessments fit this priority.
Alcohol withdrawal occurs because the brain has adapted to chronic alcohol exposure; when alcohol is stopped, the nervous system becomes overactive. Benzodiazepines calm this overactivity, while thiamine helps prevent Wernicke encephalopathy.
Clinical pearl: do not confuse medications for long-term abstinence with medications for withdrawal stabilization. The most tempting distractor is lorazepam, but it is appropriate here because benzodiazepines are first-line medications for acute withdrawal symptoms.
Question 20: Wernicke Encephalopathy Prevention — Thiamine Before or With Glucose
A client with alcohol use disorder and malnutrition is prescribed an IV infusion containing dextrose. Which nursing action is most appropriate?
The correct action is to give thiamine before or with dextrose. Clients with chronic alcohol use and malnutrition are commonly thiamine deficient, and glucose metabolism increases the need for thiamine.
This question uses the nursing process/clinical judgment step of generating solutions: the nurse identifies the intervention that prevents a predictable complication.
Thiamine is required for carbohydrate metabolism and normal brain energy use. Giving dextrose to a severely thiamine-deficient client can precipitate or worsen Wernicke encephalopathy, a serious neurologic complication.
- Clinical pearl: In alcohol use disorder plus malnutrition, think thiamine early.
- Warning signs: confusion, ataxia, and abnormal eye movements suggest Wernicke encephalopathy.
The tempting error is to delay care while waiting for labs. Treatment is based on risk, and thiamine can be given promptly before or at the same time as dextrose.
Question 21: Anorexia Nervosa — Medical Instability
A client admitted for anorexia nervosa is being assessed by the nurse. Which finding requires the nurse’s priority follow-up?
The priority finding is severe bradycardia. A heart rate of 42/min in a client with anorexia nervosa can signal medical instability and risk for poor perfusion or dysrhythmias.
Use the ABCs and physiologic safety framework: circulation problems come before psychosocial or behavioral findings. In eating disorders, unstable vital signs are treated as urgent even when the primary diagnosis is psychiatric.
Starvation can decrease cardiac muscle mass, lower metabolic rate, and contribute to electrolyte shifts. These changes can make the heart beat too slowly and increase the risk for dangerous rhythm changes.
Clinical pearl: In anorexia nervosa, monitor closely for bradycardia, hypotension, hypothermia, electrolyte abnormalities, and syncope.
The most tempting distractors are the eating-disorder behaviors, such as avoiding body-image discussion or cutting food into small pieces. These are important, but they are not as urgent as an unstable vital sign.
Question 22: Refeeding Syndrome — Electrolyte Shift During Nutritional Rehabilitation
A severely malnourished adult client is beginning nutritional rehabilitation after a prolonged period of inadequate intake. Which laboratory value is most important for the nurse to monitor?
The correct answer is phosphorus. A severely malnourished client who starts nutrition again is at risk for refeeding syndrome, and low phosphorus is the classic priority finding.
The clinical reasoning is recognize-cues: the key cue is “severely malnourished” plus “nutritional rehabilitation.” That combination should immediately signal risk for dangerous electrolyte shifts.
During starvation, the body has depleted intracellular stores. When carbohydrates are restarted, insulin rises and pulls glucose, phosphate, potassium, and magnesium into cells; phosphate is also used to make ATP.
Clinical pearl: severe hypophosphatemia can cause respiratory muscle weakness, dysrhythmias, heart failure, seizures, and hemolysis. Monitoring potassium, magnesium, glucose, and fluid balance is also important, but phosphorus is the test-day priority.
The most tempting distractor is hemoglobin because malnourished clients may be anemic. However, anemia is usually not the immediate life-threatening complication when feeding is restarted; rapid electrolyte shifts are.
Question 23: Bulimia Nervosa — Complication of Purging
A nurse is reviewing laboratory results for a client with bulimia nervosa who reports frequent self-induced vomiting. Which laboratory result is most concerning?
The most concerning result is potassium 2.9 mEq/L because it shows hypokalemia. Low potassium can disrupt cardiac electrical activity and cause dangerous dysrhythmias.
This question uses the recognize cues step of clinical judgment: identify the lab value that creates the greatest immediate safety risk. In purging behaviors, the nurse should think first about electrolyte loss, especially potassium.
Vomiting removes gastric fluid and contributes to fluid volume loss and metabolic alkalosis. The body responds in ways that can increase renal potassium loss, making hypokalemia worse.
Clinical pearl: in clients who purge, watch for muscle weakness, palpitations, ECG changes, and dysrhythmias. Hypokalemia can become life-threatening even when other labs look normal.
The tempting distractors are less urgent because they are within expected ranges or do not reflect the immediate complication of vomiting. A normal sodium, hemoglobin, or calcium value does not outweigh a clearly low potassium level.
Question 24: Restraint and Seclusion — Least Restrictive Intervention
A client in the behavioral health unit is yelling, pacing, and clenching both fists but has not attempted to strike anyone. Which nursing action should the nurse take first?
The correct first action is to offer space and use de-escalation. The client is showing warning signs of agitation, but there is not yet an immediate physical assault or loss of control that requires restraint or seclusion.
The clinical framework is least restrictive intervention first. The nurse should try safe, therapeutic measures before using restrictive measures unless there is an imminent danger to the client, staff, or others.
Agitation activates the body’s fight-or-flight response, increasing tension, pacing, loud speech, and clenched fists. Giving personal space, lowering stimulation, using a calm voice, and offering simple choices can reduce arousal and help the client regain control.
Clinical pearl: escalating cues such as clenched fists, threats, invading personal space, or inability to redirect require close attention. If the client becomes an immediate danger, the nurse should get help and follow facility policy for emergency safety interventions.
The tempting distractors are restraint and seclusion. These may feel like “safety” actions, but they are last-resort interventions, not first-line responses for a client who has not attempted harm and can still be approached safely.
Question 25: Electroconvulsive Therapy — Pre-Procedure Safety
A client with severe major depressive disorder is scheduled to receive electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) this morning. Which finding requires the nurse to delay the procedure and notify the provider?
The correct answer is the finding that the client recently ate. ECT requires general anesthesia, so the client must follow prescribed NPO instructions before the procedure.
The clinical reasoning priority is airway safety. Anesthesia decreases protective airway reflexes, so food in the stomach can be regurgitated and aspirated into the lungs.
The key warning sign is any recent food or fluid intake before a procedure involving anesthesia. This should be reported before the procedure continues.
The most tempting distractor is mild anxiety, but anxiety is common before ECT and is managed with support and teaching. It would become concerning if the client refuses the procedure, withdraws consent, or cannot participate in decision-making.
Question 26: Mental Health Client Rights — Refusal of Medication
During scheduled medication administration, a voluntary psychiatric client states, “I do not want to take this medication until I talk with the provider.” Which response by the nurse is best?
The best response is to document the medication refusal and notify the provider. A voluntary psychiatric client keeps the right to informed consent and the right to refuse medication.
The clinical reasoning framework is ethical-legal nursing care: protect client autonomy, maintain safety, document accurately, and communicate changes to the provider. The nurse may educate and assess, but cannot force the medication unless emergency legal criteria or a court order applies.
This question is not about a drug mechanism; it is about the legal principle of autonomy. A competent client has control over accepting or refusing treatment, even when the nurse believes the medication is beneficial.
Clinical pearl: refusal is not “noncompliance” to punish; it is a cue to assess understanding, provide information, document, and notify the provider.
The most tempting distractor is offering the dose later, but that skips the immediate duties of documentation and provider notification.
Question 27: Therapeutic Relationship — Termination Phase and Boundaries
On the day of discharge from an inpatient mental health unit, a client tells the nurse, “You are the only person I trust. Can we meet for coffee after I leave?” Which response by the nurse is most appropriate?
The correct response redirects the client to follow-up supports while preserving the professional boundary of the nurse-client relationship. The nurse is being supportive without becoming a friend, social contact, or personal source of care after discharge.
This question uses the clinical judgment step generate solutions: the nurse must choose the response that meets the client’s emotional need in a safe, therapeutic way. In the termination phase, clients may feel grief, anxiety, dependency, or fear of losing support.
The key psychosocial mechanism is that the therapeutic relationship can create feelings of trust and attachment. Those feelings are not “wrong,” but they must be managed with clear limits and planned transition to ongoing care.
Clinical pearl: In therapeutic communication questions, choose the response that combines boundaries plus support. Avoid responses that reject the client or offer personal contact.
The most tempting distractors are the ones that sound kind, such as meeting once or giving a phone number. These are unsafe because they blur professional roles and can increase dependency.
Question 28: Somatic Symptom Disorder — Therapeutic Approach to Somatic Complaints
A client with somatic symptom disorder frequently reports chest discomfort. Cardiac causes have been evaluated and ruled out. Which nursing response is most appropriate?
The best response is to ask what was happening before the discomfort started. This uses therapeutic communication to explore triggers without denying the client's symptom.
Using the nursing process and psychosocial assessment, the nurse first maintains trust, then helps the client identify patterns between physical symptoms, stressors, emotions, and coping behaviors.
In somatic symptom disorder, symptoms are experienced as real and distressing. The problem is not that the client is “faking”; the distress and preoccupation with physical symptoms are genuine.
Clinical pearl: do not tell the client the symptom is “nothing,” “imaginary,” or simply “anxiety.” Those responses can increase defensiveness and reduce trust.
The most tempting distractor is the statement about normal test results. Although accurate, it does not explore the client's distress or help the client develop insight into possible stress-related patterns.
Question 29: Substance Use Relapse Prevention — Trigger-Based Coping Plan
A client in recovery from alcohol use disorder tells the nurse, “I usually drink after arguing with my partner.” Which response by the nurse best supports relapse prevention?
The best response is to help the client plan what to do after arguments. The client has already identified a relapse trigger, so the next step is making a specific, realistic coping plan.
This uses the clinical judgment step of generating solutions: the nurse helps the client choose actions that can reduce risk when a known trigger occurs.
In substance use recovery, triggers can activate craving, stress responses, and automatic habits linked to past alcohol use. A planned response interrupts that pattern before drinking occurs.
- Trigger identified: arguing with the partner
- Relapse-prevention need: a concrete coping action
- Clinical pearl: the best relapse-prevention answer usually includes a specific, realistic plan
The most tempting distractor is simply validating that arguments are common stressors. Validation is supportive, but by itself it does not create a plan to prevent relapse.
Question 30: Violence Risk — Imminent Risk Assessment
A client admitted involuntarily to an inpatient psychiatric unit tells the nurse, “When I get out, I know exactly where my coworker lives, and I will make him pay.” Which nursing action is the priority?
The correct action is to start safety precautions and notify the team. A threat that names a specific target and implies intent to harm is a serious warning sign for possible violence.
The priority framework is safety first. The nurse must protect the client, staff, and potential victim before exploring feelings, gathering background details, or providing general limit setting.
The key clinical idea is that violence risk increases when a client expresses intent, has an identifiable target, and indicates knowledge of how to reach that person. This moves the statement from vague anger to a potentially actionable threat.
Clinical pearl: A specific threat toward an identifiable person requires immediate escalation according to facility policy, including team notification and duty-to-protect procedures.
The tempting distractor is documenting the quote. Documentation is required, but it is not enough by itself; delaying action until tomorrow could place others at risk.
Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways: Mental Health and Psychiatric Nursing NCLEX Practice
- Therapeutic communication: Reflect or explore the client's emotion; avoid advice, minimization, and forced positivity.
- Suicide risk: Ask directly about suicidal thoughts whenever a client gives away possessions, talks about death, or expresses hopelessness. Energy before mood can increase risk.
- Hallucinations: When harm is commanded, protect people first; do not argue with the perception. Stay with the client and secure the area.
- Delusions: Present reality calmly and briefly. Do not debate, challenge, or over-explain.
- Negative symptoms: Flat affect, poverty of speech, avolition, and social withdrawal point to negative symptoms. Hallucinations and delusions are positive symptoms.
- Mania: Low stimulation, high-calorie portable foods, fluids, rest, and safety. Avoid insight-focused or group activities during acute mania.
- Lithium safety: Hold the drug and notify the provider for vomiting, diarrhea, dehydration, or signs of toxicity (confusion, ataxia, severe tremor). Sodium and fluid balance affect levels.
- Serotonin syndrome: Sweaty, speedy, hyperreflexia, and diarrhea within 24 hours of a serotonergic drug change.
- NMS: Fever plus severe 'lead-pipe' rigidity in a client on dopamine blockers. Hold the antipsychotic and notify immediately.
- Extrapyramidal side effects: Acute dystonia = benztropine; tardive dyskinesia = notify provider, do not mask with gum or sedation.
- MAOI diet: Avoid aged, cured, smoked, fermented, and pickled foods. Severe headache in an MAOI client is a hypertensive crisis until proven otherwise.
- Panic: Calm presence, brief directions, and safety — not detailed teaching or insight work during the episode.
- Flashbacks: Ground first, process later. Orient to place, time, and safety.
- OCD: Gradual exposure and response prevention. Avoid both extremes — do not abruptly forbid rituals, and do not fully enable them.
- Borderline personality disorder: Firm, calm, consistent limits across the team. Acknowledge feelings; do not label 'splitting.'
- Alcohol withdrawal: Benzodiazepines and thiamine; not disulfiram. Thiamine before or with glucose to prevent Wernicke encephalopathy.
- Eating disorders: Prioritize physiologic safety (bradycardia, electrolytes) over behavioral findings. Refeeding syndrome = watch phosphorus first.
- Restraints and seclusion: Least restrictive first. Reserve for immediate danger.
- ECT: Confirm NPO status, written consent, and removal of dentures/jewelry before the procedure.
- Client rights: A voluntary client can refuse medication; document and notify the provider. Boundaries plus support, not friendship, during termination.
- Relapse prevention: Identify triggers and build a specific coping plan — not vague reassurance or thought suppression.
- Violence risk: A specific target with a specific threat requires immediate safety escalation and team notification.
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