Answer to Question 1
Ans: A, B, D, E
Feedback:
If the client is experiencing sensory overload, interventions should focus on reducing stimulation involving information, the environment, and internal factors. Limiting extraneous noise, bright lights, room clutter, interruptions, pain, and stress reduces stimulation. Clients with sensory overload may neglect their ADLs to the point that they need assistance. Such assistance can be problematic because it can add to sensory overload. With this in mind, assist the client only with the immediately essential ADLs (moving, eating, toileting, and resting). Additional tasks may be added as the client is able to cope.
Answer to Question 2
Ans: A, C, D, E
Feedback:
Measures to provide stimulation include playing the television or the radio occasionally, playing music for brief periods, encouraging use of a clock and calendar, encouraging the client to dress for the day's activities, putting up colorful pictures, encouraging visitors, encouraging family to bring in personal items such as photographs, opening the drapes, and turning on lights. Place the bed or chair so the client can see or hear activities in the area and when someone enters the room. Frequent interaction with the client also may help. Discussing scheduling of care and placement of equipment, encouraging self-care activities, providing tactile stimulation through back rubs, combing and brushing the client's hair (or encouraging the client to do so), reading to the client, speaking slowly and clearly, and identifying yourself verbally and with a name tag are meaningful interactions.