Author Question: The nurse has been asked to explain electroconvulsive therapy to a client and his family. Which of ... (Read 57 times)

P68T

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The nurse has been asked to explain electroconvulsive therapy to a client and his family. Which of the following statements made by the nurse is most accurate?
 
  A) You will need to receive treatment twice a week for several years to prevent relapse.
  B) A tapering schedule may be used to end your treatments to prevent rehospitalization.
  C) If you show improvement after the treatment, your previous symptoms will not return.
  D) The entire procedure typically lasts between 15 and 20 minutes.

Question 2

A nurse is performing patient education in anticipation of the client's first treatment with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). In the process of ECT, what is electricity is used to induce?
 
  A) Temporary brain hypoxia
  B) Amnesia
  C) Seizure activity
  D) Neural reorganization



Loise Hard

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Answer to Question 1

Ans: B
Feedback:
Typically ECT is given twice weekly on nonconsecutive days; treatments may range from a few to 15 sessions, depending on a client's response. The entire procedure lasts less than 1 hour, although each client's recovery time varies. When repeated episodes of depression or serious other life-threatening symptoms occur after a series of treatments with ECT, the physician may opt to taper ECT over several weeks to months. Typically, a tapering schedule is once a week for 1 month, once every 2 weeks for 2 months, once every 3 weeks for 2 months, and once every month for 2 to 4 months. This kind of tapering may help prevent rehospitalization. Occasionally, clients relapse and have to return for maintenance treatment.

Answer to Question 2

Ans: C
Feedback:
Inducing seizures as a means of therapy for mental illnesses dates back to the early 1700s, when camphor was used for this purpose. Modern electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), in which electricity is used to induce a convulsion, was introduced to psychiatric practice in the 1930s in Italy.



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