Answer to Question 1
A
When using a crisis-intervention approach, the nurse helps the client make the mental connection between the stressful event and the client's reaction to it.
Because an individual's or family's usual coping strategies are ineffective in managing the stress of the precipitating event in a crisis situation, the use of new coping mechanisms is required.
Time-management skills will not help reduce the stress of the precipitating event in a crisis situa-tion.
What may have worked in past experiences will likely be ineffective in managing the stress of the precipitating event in a crisis situation.
Answer to Question 2
A
When the nurse views the family as context, the primary focus is on the health and development of an individual member existing within a specific environment (i.e., the patient's family). Although the focus is on the individual's health status, the nurse assesses how much the family provides the individual's basic needs. Family patterns are in the realm of family as patient. It is important to understand that although the nurse is able to make theoretical and practical distinctions between family as context and family as patient, they are not necessarily mutually exclusive. Often, the nurse will use the two simultaneously, as with the perspective of family as system. Family as patient involves planning to meet the needs of the patient and those of his family as well.