Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

Assignment, please follow rubric and 7th edition APA format

  • attachment

    AssignmentFAMILYASSESSMENTWEEK26645.docx

    Assignment: Family Assessment

    Assessment is as essential to family therapy as it is to individual therapy. Although families often present with one person identified as the “problem,” the assessment process will help you better understand family roles and determine whether the identified problem client is in fact the root of the family’s issues. Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

     

    Photo Credit: Getty Images

    To prepare:

    · Review this week’s Learning Resources and reflect on the insights they provide on family assessment. Be sure to review the resource on psychotherapy genograms.

    · Download the Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Note Template and review the requirements of the documentation. There is also an exemplar provided with detailed guidance and examples.

    · View the Mother and Daughter: A Cultural Tale video in the Learning Resources and consider how you might assess the family in the case study.

    The Assignment

    Document the following for the family in the video, using the Comprehensive Evaluation Note Template:

    · Chief complaint

    · History of present illness

    · Past psychiatric history

    · Substance use history

    · Family psychiatric/substance use history

    · Psychosocial history/Developmental history

    · Medical history

    · Review of systems (ROS)

    · Physical assessment (if applicable)

    · Mental status exam

    · Differential diagnosis—Include a minimum of three differential diagnoses and include how you derived each diagnosis in accordance with DSM-5 diagnostic criteria

    · Case formulation and treatment plan

    · Include a psychotherapy genogram for the family

    Note: For any item you are unable to address from the video, explain how you would gather this information and why it is important for diagnosis and treatment planning.

    In this course, you are required to upload PDFs in the majority of your assignments. This is to show that the resources that you have chosen are considered scholarly. Most assignments require that at least three peer-reviewed, evidence-based sources are uploaded. Please be sure to review the rubric and assignment instructions in regards to this prior to submitting. Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

  • attachment

    RubricDetai1WEEK26645.docx

    Rubric Detail

     

    Select Grid View or List View to change the rubric’s layout.

    Name: NRNP_6645_Week2_Assignment_Rubric

     

    · Grid View

    · List View

      Excellent 90%–100% Good 80%–89% Fair 70%–79% Poor 0%–69%
    Document the following for the family in the video, using the Comprehensive Evaluation Note Template: • Chief complaint • History of present illness • Past psychiatric history • Substance use history • Family psychiatric/substance use history • Psychosocial history/Developmental history • Medical history • Review of systems (ROS) • Physical assessment (if applicable) 18 (18%) – 20 (20%)

    The assignment includes an accurate, clear, and complete description of the subjective and objective information for the client family. The response addresses each of the required elements and demonstrates thoughtful consideration of the client family’s situation and culture.

    16 (16%) – 17 (17%)

    The assignment includes an accurate, clear, and complete description of the subjective and objective information for the client family.

    14 (14%) – 15 (15%)

    The assignment includes a description of the subjective and objective information for the client family but is somewhat general or contains small inaccuracies.

    0 (0%) – 13 (13%)

    The assignment includes a description of the subjective and objective information for the client family but is vague or contains many inaccuracies. Or, several of the required elements are missing.

    • Mental status exam • Differential diagnoses—Include a minimum of three differential diagnoses and include how you derived at each diagnosis in accordance with DSM-5 diagnostic criteria 18 (18%) – 20 (20%)

    The response thoroughly and accurately documents the results of the mental status exam. Response lists at least three distinctly different and detailed possible disorders in order of priority for a differential diagnosis of the family in the assigned case study, and it provides a thorough, accurate, and detailed justification for each of the disorders selected.

    16 (16%) – 17 (17%)

    The response accurately documents the results of the mental status exam. Response lists at least three distinctly different and detailed possible disorders in order of priority for a differential diagnosis of the patient in the assigned case study, and it provides an accurate justification for each of the disorders selected.

    14 (14%) – 15 (15%)

    The response documents the results of the mental status exam with some vagueness or innacuracy. Response lists at least three different possible disorders for a differential diagnosis of the patient and provides a justification for each, but may contain some vaguess or innacuracy.

    0 (0%) – 13 (13%)

    The response provides an incomplete or inaccurate description of the results of the mental status exam and/or explanation of the differential diagnoses. Or, assessment documentation is missing.

    • Case formulation • Treatment plan that includes psychotherapy interventions 23 (23%) – 25 (25%)

    Case formulation is thorough, thoughtful, and demonstrate critical thinking. The assignment includes an accurate, clear, and complete treatment plan for the client family that includes psychotherapy interventions. The response demonstrates thoughtful consideration of the client family’s situation and culture.

    20 (20%) – 22 (22%)

    Case formulation demonstrates critical thinking. The assignment includes an accurate, clear, and complete treatment plan for the client family that includes psychotherapy interventions.

    18 (18%) – 19 (19%)

    Case formulation is somewhat general or does not demonstrate critical thinking. The assignment includes a treatment plan for the client family that includes psychotherapy interventions but is somewhat general or contains small inaccuracies.

    0 (0%) – 17 (17%)

    The assignment provides a vague and/or inaccurate description of the case formulation and treatment plan for the client family. Or, many of the required elements are missing.

    • A psychotherapy genogram for the family 18 (18%) – 20 (20%)

    The assignment includes an accurate, clear, and complete genogram of the client family. The documentation style is consistent and a key is provided.

    16 (16%) – 17 (17%)

    The assignment includes an accurate genogram of the client family. The documentation style is consistent and a key is provided.

    14 (14%) – 15 (15%)

    The assignment includes a genogram of the client family but is somewhat limited or contains factual inaccuracies or inconsistencies in documentation style.

    0 (0%) – 13 (13%)

    The genogram provided is vague or contains many inaccuracies. Or, the genogram is missing.

    Written Expression and Formatting – Paragraph Development and Organization: Paragraphs make clear points that support well-developed ideas, flow logically, and demonstrate continuity of ideas. Sentences are carefully focused—neither long and rambling nor short and lacking substance. A clear and comprehensive purpose statement and introduction are provided which delineate all required criteria. 5 (5%) – 5 (5%)

    Paragraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity. A clear and comprehensive purpose statement, introduction, and conclusion are provided that delineate all required criteria.

    4 (4%) – 4 (4%)

    Paragraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity 80% of the time. Purpose, introduction, and conclusion of the assignment are stated, yet are brief and not descriptive.

    3 (3%) – 3 (3%)

    Paragraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity 60%–79% of the time. Purpose, introduction, and conclusion of the assignment are vague or off topic.

    0 (0%) – 2 (2%)

    Paragraphs and sentences follow writing standards for flow, continuity, and clarity <60% of the time. No purpose statement, introduction, or conclusion were provided.

    Written Expression and Formatting – English writing standards: Correct grammar, mechanics, and proper punctuation 5 (5%) – 5 (5%)

    Uses correct grammar, spelling, and punctuation with no errors.

    4 (4%) – 4 (4%)

    Contains 1 or 2 grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors.

    3 (3%) – 3 (3%)

    Contains 3 or 4 grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors.

    0 (0%) – 2 (2%)

    Contains many (≥5) grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors that interfere with the reader’s understanding.

    Written Expression and Formatting – The paper follows correct APA format for title page, headings, font, spacing, margins, indentations, page numbers, parenthetical/in-text citations, and reference list. 5 (5%) – 5 (5%)

    Uses correct APA format with no errors.

    4 (4%) – 4 (4%)

    Contains 1 or 2 APA format errors.

    3 (3%) – 3 (3%)

    Contains 3 or 4 APA format errors.

    0 (0%) – 2 (2%)

    Contains many (≥5) APA format errors.

    Total Points: 100

    Name: NRNP_6645_Week2_Assignment_Rubric

     

     

    Exit

    Exit

  • attachment

    AMOTHERandADAUGHTER.docx
  • attachment

    ComprehensivePsychiatricEvaluationExemplarFORPRAC6645.doc

    NRNP/PRAC 6645 Comprehensive Psychiatric

    Evaluation Note Template

    INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO USE EXEMPLAR AND TEMPLATE—READ CAREFULLY

    If you are struggling with the format or remembering what to include, follow the Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Template AND the Rubric as your guide. It is also helpful to review the rubric in detail in order not to lose points unnecessarily because you missed something required. Below highlights by category are taken directly from the grading rubric for the assignments. After reviewing full details of the rubric, you can use it as a guide. Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

    In the Subjective section, provide:

    · Chief complaint

    · History of present illness (HPI)

    · Past psychiatric history

    · Medication trials and current medications

    · Psychotherapy or previous psychiatric diagnosis

    · Pertinent substance use, family psychiatric/substance use, social, and medical history

    · Allergies

    · ROS

    · Read rating descriptions to see the grading standards!

    In the Objective section, provide:

    · Physical exam documentation of systems pertinent to the chief complaint, HPI, and history

    · Diagnostic results, including any labs, imaging, or other assessments needed to develop the differential diagnoses.

    · Read rating descriptions to see the grading standards!

    In the Assessment section, provide:

    · Results of the mental status examination, presented in paragraph form.

    · At least three differentials with supporting evidence. List them from top priority to least priority. Compare the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for each differential diagnosis and explain what DSM-5 criteria rules out the differential diagnosis to find an accurate diagnosis. Explain the critical-thinking process that led you to the primary diagnosis you selected. Include pertinent positives and pertinent negatives for the specific patient case .

    · Read rating descriptions to see the grading standards!

    Reflect on this case. Include what you learned and what you might do differently. Also include in your reflection a discussion related to legal/ethical considerations ( demonstrate critical thinking beyond confidentiality and consent for treatment !), health promotion and disease prevention taking into consideration patient factors (such as age, ethnic group, etc.), PMH, and other risk factors (e.g., socioeconomic, cultural background, etc.). Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

    (The comprehensive evaluation is typically the initial new patient evaluation. You will practice writing this type of note in this course. You will be ruling out other mental illnesses so often you will write up what symptoms are present and what symptoms are not present from illnesses to demonstrate you have indeed assessed for all illnesses which could be impacting your patient. For example, anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, bipolar symptoms, psychosis symptoms, substance use, etc.)

    EXEMPLAR BEGINS HERE

    CC (chief complaint): A brief statement identifying why the patient is here. This statement is verbatim of the patient’s own words about why they are presenting for assessment. For a patient with dementia or other cognitive deficits, this statement can be obtained from a family member.

    HPI: Begin this section with patient’s initials, age, race, gender, purpose of evaluation, current medication, and referral reason. For example:

    N.M. is a 34-year-old Asian male who presents for psychotherapeutic evaluation for anxiety. He is currently prescribed sertraline by (?) which he finds ineffective. His PCP referred him for evaluation and treatment.

    Or

    P.H. is a 16-year-old Hispanic female who presents for psychotherapeutic evaluation for concentration difficulty. She is not currently prescribed psychotropic medications. She is referred by her mental health provider for evaluation and treatment.

    Then, this section continues with the symptom analysis for your note. Thorough documentation in this section is essential for patient care, coding, and billing analysis.

    Paint a picture of what is wrong with the patient. This section contains the symptoms that is bringing the patient into your office. The symptoms onset, the duration, the frequency, the severity, and the impact. Your description here will guide your differential diagnoses. You are seeking symptoms that may align with many DSM-5 diagnoses, narrowing to what aligns with diagnostic criteria for mental health and substance use disorders. You will complete a psychiatric ROS to rule out other psychiatric illnesses.

    Past Psychiatric History: This section documents the patient’s past treatments. Use the mnemonic GChMP.

    General Statement: Typically, this is a statement of the patients first treatment experience. For example: The patient entered treatment at the age of 10 with counseling for depression during her parents’ divorce. OR The patient entered treatment for detox at age 26 after abusing alcohol since age 13.

    Caregivers are listed if applicable.

    Hospitalizations: How many hospitalizations? When and where was last hospitalization? How many detox? How many residential treatments? When and where was last detox/residential treatment? Any history of suicidal or homicidal behaviors? Any history of self-harm behaviors?

    Medication trials: What are the previous psychotropic medications the patient has tried and what was their reaction? Effective, Not Effective, Adverse Reaction? Some examples: Haloperidol (dystonic reaction), risperidone (hyperprolactinemia), olanzapine (effective, insurance wouldn’t pay for it)

    Psychotherapy or Previous Psychiatric Diagnosis: This section can be completed one of two ways depending on what you want to capture to support the evaluation. First, does the patient know what type? Did they find psychotherapy helpful or not? Why? Second, what are the previous diagnosis for the client noted from previous treatments and other providers. (Or, you could document both.)

    Substance Use History: This section contains any history or current use of caffeine, nicotine, illicit substance (including marijuana), and alcohol. Include the daily amount of use and last known use. Include type of use such as inhales, snorts, IV, etc. Include any histories of withdrawal complications from tremors, Delirium Tremens, or seizures. Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

    Family Psychiatric/Substance Use History: This section contains any family history of psychiatric illness, substance use illnesses, and family suicides. You may choose to use a genogram to depict this information (be sure to include a reader’s key to your genogram) or write up in narrative form.

    Psychosocial History: This section may be lengthy if completing an evaluation for psychotherapy or shorter if completing an evaluation for psychopharmacology. However, at a minimum, please include:

    · Where patient was born, who raised the patient

    · Number of brothers/sisters (what order is the patient within siblings)

    · Who the patient currently lives with in a home? Are they single, married, divorced, widowed? How many children?

    · Educational Level

    · Hobbies

    · Work History: currently working/profession, disabled, unemployed, retired?

    · Legal history: past hx, any current issues?

    · Trauma history: Any childhood or adult history of trauma?

    · Violence Hx: Concern or issues about safety (personal, home, community, sexual (current & historical)

    Medical History: This section contains any illnesses, surgeries, include any hx of seizures, head injuries.

    Current Medications: Include dosage, frequency, length of time used, and reason for use. Also include OTC or homeopathic products.

    Allergies: Include medication, food, and environmental allergies separately. Provide a description of what the allergy is (e.g., angioedema, anaphylaxis). This will help determine a true reaction vs. intolerance.

    Reproductive Hx: Menstrual history (date of LMP), Pregnant (yes or no), Nursing/lactating (yes or no), contraceptive use (method used), types of intercourse: oral, anal, vaginal, other, any sexual concerns

    Diagnostic results: Include any labs, X-rays, or other diagnostics that are needed to develop the differential diagnoses (support with evidenced and guidelines).

    A ssessment

    Mental Status Examination: For the purposes of your courses, this section must be presented in paragraph form and not use of a checklist! This section you will describe the patient’s appearance, attitude, behavior, mood and affect, speech, thought processes, thought content, perceptions (hallucinations, pseudo hallucinations, illusions, etc.), cognition, insight, judgment, and SI/HI. See an example below. You will modify to include the specifics for your patient on the above elements—DO NOT just copy the example. You may use a preceptor’s way of organizing the information if the MSE is in paragraph form.

    He is an 8 yo African American male who looks his stated age. He is cooperative with examiner. He is neatly groomed and clean, dressed appropriately. There is no evidence of any abnormal motor activity. His speech is clear, coherent, normal in volume and tone. His thought process is goal directed and logical. There is no evidence of looseness of association or flight of ideas. His mood is euthymic, and his affect appropriate to his mood. He was smiling at times in an appropriate manner. He denies any auditory or visual hallucinations. There is no evidence of any delusional thinking.   He denies any current suicidal or homicidal ideation. Cognitively, he is alert and oriented. His recent and remote memory is intact. His concentration is good. His insight is good.

    Differential Diagnoses: You must have at least three differentials with supporting evidence. Explain what rules each differential in or out and justify your primary diagnosis selection. Include pertinent positives and pertinent negatives for the specific patient case.

    Also included in this section is the reflection. Reflect on this case and discuss whether or not you agree with your preceptor’s treatment of the patient and why or why not. What did you learn from this case? What would you do differently?

    Also include in your reflection a discussion related to legal/ethical considerations (demonstrate critical thinking beyond confidentiality and consent for treatment!), health promotion and disease prevention taking into consideration patient factors (such as age, ethnic group, etc.), PMH, and other risk factors (e.g., socioeconomic, cultural background, etc.).

    Case Formulation and Treatment Plan. 

    Includes documentation of diagnostic studies that will be obtained, referrals to other health care providers, therapeutic interventions with psychotherapy, education, disposition of the patient, and any planned follow-up visits. Each diagnosis or condition documented in the assessment should be addressed in the plan. The details of the plan should follow an orderly manner. *see an example below—you will modify to your practice so there may be information excluded/included—what does your preceptor document?

    Example:

    Initiation of (what form/type) of individual, group, or family psychotherapy and frequency.

    Documentation of any resources you provide for patient education or coping/relaxation skills, homework for next appointment. Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

    Client has emergency numbers: Emergency Services 911, the Client’s Crisis Line 1-800-_______. Client instructed to go to nearest ER or call 911 if they become actively suicidal and/or homicidal. (only if you or preceptor provided them)

    Reviewed hospital records/therapist records for collaborative information; Reviewed PCP report (only if actually available)

    Time allowed for questions and answers provided. Provided supportive listening. Client appeared to understand discussion. Client is amenable with this plan and agrees to follow treatment regimen as discussed. (This relates to informed consent; you will need to assess their understanding and agreement.)

    Follow up with PCP as needed and/or for:

    Write out what psychotherapy testing or screening ordered/conducted, rationale for ordering

    Any other community or provider referrals

    Return to clinic:

    Continued treatment is medically necessary to address chronic symptoms, improve functioning, and prevent the need for a higher level of care OR if one-time evaluation, say so and any other follow up plans.

    References (move to begin on next page)

    You are required to include at least three evidence-based, peer-reviewed journal articles or evidenced-based guidelines which relate to this case to support your diagnostics and differentials diagnoses. Be sure to use correct APA 7th edition formatting. Assignment: Family Assessment Discussion

    © 2021 Walden University Page 1 of 6

  • attachment

    ComprehensivePsychiatricEvaluationTemplateFORPRAC6645.doc

    NRNP/PRAC 6645 Comprehensive Psychiatric Evaluation Template

    Week (enter week #): (Enter assignment title)

    Student Name

    College of Nursing-PMHNP, Walden University

    NRNP 6635: Psychopathology and Diagnostic Reasoning

    Faculty Name

    Assignment Due Date

    Subjective:

    CC (chief complaint):

    HPI:

    (include psychiatric ROS rule out)

    Past Psychiatric History:

    · General Statement:

    · Caregivers (if applicable):

    · Hospitalizations:

    · Medication trials:

    · Psychotherapy or Previous Psychiatric Diagnosis:

    Substance Current Use and History:

    Family Psychiatric/Substance Use History:

    Psychosocial History:

    Medical History:

    · Current Medications:

    · Allergies:

    · Reproductive Hx:

    Objective:

    Diagnostic results:

    Assessment:

    Mental Status Examination:

    Differential Diagnoses:

    Reflections:

    Case Formulation and Treatment Plan:

    References

    © 2021 Walden University Page 2 of 3