Theories in Mental Health Care
Developmental, Humanistic, and Behavioral Views
Maslow, Systems, and Homeostasis
Cognitive, Sociocultural, and Stress Theories
Psychobiology, Nursing Theory, and Treatment
100

These organized explanations help nurses understand behavior, identify client needs, and select appropriate interventions.

Theories

100

This group of theories explains personality and emotional growth as occurring through predictable stages across the lifespan.

Developmental theories

100

According to Maslow, these needs—including oxygen, food, water, sleep, and elimination—must be addressed before higher-level needs.

Physiological needs

100

This theory proposes that emotions and behavior are influenced by how an individual interprets events.

Cognitive theory

100

This field examibiology, nes how genetics, brain structures, neurotransmitters, hormones, and other biological processes influence mental health.

Psychobiology

200

A nurse uses a theoretical framework to organize assessment findings and plan individualized care. This demonstrates that theories provide this for clinical practice.

Systematic guide for understanding and responding to client behavior

200

Erikson proposed that individuals face a specific psychosocial conflict during each of these.

Developmental stages

200

A highly anxious client reports feeling unsafe and has not eaten for two days. According to Maslow, the nurse should first address the client’s nutrition and this need.

Safety

200

A client says, “I failed one test, so I am a complete failure.” The nurse identifies this as an example of what?

Cognitive distortion

200

The study of psychobiology has increased understanding of how changes in serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine may contribute to these conditions.

Mental disorders and emotional symptoms

300

Freud’s theory emphasizes unconscious conflicts, early childhood experiences, and the influence of the id, ego, and superego. This is known as what?

Psychoanalytic theory

300

This viewpoint emphasizes personal growth, free will, self-awareness, and the individual’s potential to become fully functioning.

Humanistic viewpoint

300

This theory views the individual as part of an interconnected whole in which changes in one area affect all other areas.

Systems theory

300

This theoretical perspective examines how family, culture, poverty, discrimination, social roles, and community conditions affect mental health.

Sociocultural theory

300

Peplau’s nursing theory emphasizes the therapeutic relationship between the nurse and client. This theory is known as what?

Interpersonal relations theory

400

Free association, dream analysis, and analysis of transference are three therapeutic techniques that developed from this theorist’s work.

Sigmund Freud

400

This theory focuses on observable behavior and proposes that behavior is learned through conditioning, reinforcement, and consequences.

Behavioral theory

400

The tendency of a person or system to maintain internal stability and balance is called this.

Homeostasis

400

Selye described the body’s response to prolonged stress as alarm, resistance, and exhaustion. Together, these stages are called what?

General adaptation syndrome

400

Individual, group, and family therapy are three forms of this treatment based primarily on communication and therapeutic interaction.

Psychotherapy

500

A client begins treating the nurse as though the nurse were a critical parent. In psychoanalytic theory, this behavior is called what?

Transference

500

A nurse praises a client each time the client attends group therapy. This intervention is an example of this behavioral technique.

Positive reinforcement

500

A family changes its routines after one member develops severe depression. From a systems perspective, this occurs because a change in one family member affects this.

Entire family system
500

A client experiencing long-term stress develops fatigue, frequent infections, and difficulty coping. According to Selye, the client may be entering this stage.

Exhaustion stage

500

Psychotherapy uses communication and psychological techniques, whereas medications, electroconvulsive therapy, and other physical treatments belong to this category.

Somatic therapies

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