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NSG221 MENTAL HEALTH NURSING - EXAM TWO QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS VERIFIED BY EXPERTS $10.49   Add to cart

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NSG221 MENTAL HEALTH NURSING - EXAM TWO QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS VERIFIED BY EXPERTS

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NSG221 MENTAL HEALTH NURSING - EXAM TWO QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS VERIFIED BY EXPERTS Mourning Rituals Examples include having a wake, sitting shiva, holding religious ceremonies, and arranging funerals. Physiologic Loss Examples include amputation of a limb, a mastectomy ...

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  • September 28, 2024
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  • 2024/2025
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NSG221 MENTAL HEALTH NURSING - EXAM TWO QUESTIONS

AND ANSWERS WITH COMPLETE SOLUTIONS VERIFIED BY

EXPERTS



Mourning Rituals


Examples include having a wake, sitting shiva, holding religious ceremonies, and arranging funerals.


Physiologic Loss


Examples include amputation of a limb, a mastectomy or hysterectomy, or loss of mobility.


Safety Loss


Loss of a safe environment is evident in domestic violence, child abuse, or public violence. A person's

home should be a safe haven with trust that family members will provide protection, not harm or

violence. Some public institutions, such as schools and churches, are often associated with safety as well.

That feeling of safety is shattered when violence occurs on campus or in a holy place.


Loss of Security and a Sense of Belonging


The loss of a loved one affects the need to love and the feeling of being loved. Loss accompanies changes

in relationships, such as birth, marriage, divorce, illness, and death; as the meaning of a relationship

changes, a person may lose roles within a family or group.


Loss of Self-Esteem

,Any change in how a person is valued at work or in relationships or by him or herself can threaten this

type of loss. It may be an actual change or the person's perception of a change in value. Death of a loved

one, a broken relationship, loss of a job, and retirement are examples of change that represent loss and

can result in a threat to this type of loss.


Loss Related to Self-Actualization


An external or internal crisis that blocks or inhibits striving toward fulfillment may threaten personal

goals and individual potential. A person who wanted to go to college, write books, and teach at a

university reaches a point in life when it becomes evident that those plans will never materialize or a

person loses hope that he or she will find a mate and have children. These are losses that the person will

grieve.


Kubler-Ross Name of 5 Stages


1. Denial

2. Anger

3. Bargaining

4. Depression

5. Acceptance


Kubler-Ross 5 Stages of Grief: Denial


Shock and disbelief regarding the loss.


Kubler-Ross 5 Stages of Grief: Anger


May be expressed toward God, relatives, friends, or health care providers.


Kubler-Ross 5 Stages of Grief: Bargaining

, Occurs when the person asks God or fate for more time to delay the inevitable loss.


Kubler-Ross 5 Stages of Grief: Depression


Results when awareness of the loss becomes acute.


Kubler-Ross 5 Stages of Grief: Acceptance


Occurs when the person shows evidence of coming to terms with death.


Engel's 5 Stages of Loss


1. Shock and Disbelief

2. Developing Awareness

3. Restitution

4. Resolution of Loss

5. Recovery


Engel Stages of Loss: Shock & Belief


The initial reaction to a loss is a stunned, numb feeling accompanied by refusal to acknowledge the

reality of the loss in an attempt to protect the self against overwhelming stress.


Engel Stages of Loss: Developing Awareness


As the individual begins to acknowledge the loss, there may be crying, feelings of helplessness,

frustration, despair, and anger that can be directed at self or others, including God or the deceased

person.


Engel Stages of Loss: Restitution


Participation in the rituals associated with death, such as a funeral, wake, family gathering, or religious

ceremonies that help the individual accept the reality of the loss and begin the recovery process.

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